Anchin Abbey

Anchin Abbey
L'abbaye d'Anchin

A sixteenth-century view of the abbey
Monastery information
Order Benedictine
Established 1079
Disestablished 1790

Anchin Abbey was a Benedictine monastery founded in 1079 in the commune of Pecquencourt in what is now the Nord department of France.

History

Aquicintum, later Aquacignium and then Anchin (or Enchin), was a 25 hectare island forming part of the territory of Pecquencourt, between the marais, the river Scarpe and the Bouchart brook.[1]

The hermit and confessor Gordaine[2] built his hermitage on the island in the 8th century)[3] and is sometimes considered the abbey's founder: an anonymous 12th century painting in the church of Saint-Gilles at Pecquencourt shows his miracles.[4]

In 1096 the abbey was the site of a large tournament, the Tournoi d'Anchin, at which 300 knights from Ostrevent, Hainaut, Cambrésis and Artois fought.[5] An important cultural centre from the 11th to 13th centuries, it produced many manuscripts and charters.[6]

In 1562 Anchin College (now the Lycée Albert-Châtelet) was built by the Jesuits under the abbey's patronage. It was suppressed in the French Revolution, declared state property by the decree of 28 October 1790, sold to François-Joseph Tassart of Douai on 27 March 1792 for 47,700 livres and demolished later that year.

Treasures

A 13th century gilded copper priest's cross, found at Anchin in 1872 in a tomb, is now in the musée des Beaux-Arts de Valenciennes. The Anchin Retable is a polyptych on wood of c.1551 by the artist Jehan Bellegambe, now held at the musée de la Chartreuse de Douai.[7] The Lille painter Joseph Wamps also produced many works for the abbey, including many sketches destroyed by fire in the First World War.

Notes

  1. Enée-Aimé Escalier, L'abbaye d'Anchin, 1079-1792, L. Lefort, Lille, 1852, p. 13 (Google Books)
  2. feast day 16 October
  3. forum - orthodoxe .com : saints for 16 October
  4. Ministère de la culture - Palissy
  5. Paul André Roger, Archives historiques et ecclésiastiques de la Picardie et de l'Artois, Duval & Herment, Amiens, 1842, p. 265-268 (Google Books)
  6. Jean-Pierre Gerzaguet, ed., Les chartes de l'abbaye d'Anchin (1079-1201), Brepols, Turnhout (Belgium), 2005, collection ARTEM, numéro 6, 511 p. ISBN 2-503-52172-X
  7. Flemish Primitives at the musée de Douai Archived December 10, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.

References

External links

Coordinates: 50°23′11.42″N 3°12′31.31″E / 50.3865056°N 3.2086972°E / 50.3865056; 3.2086972

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