Saint-Vigor Priory Explained

Saint-Vigor Priory, formerly Saint-Vigor Abbey (French: Prieuré Saint-Vigor; Abbaye Saint-Vigor-le-Grand), was a Benedictine monastery in the town of Saint-Vigor-le-Grand in Calvados, Normandy, France. Its foundation is attributed to Saint Vigor, bishop of Bayeux in the first third of the 6th century.[1] It was destroyed in the late 10th century by the invading Normans.[2] In the late 11th century Odo, bishop of Bayeux, attempted a revival of the monastery as an independent abbey but it was not successful, and in the 1090s the community was made a dependent priory of the Abbey of St. Benignus, Dijon. The abbey relinquished its rights over the priory in 1702. The reformist Congregation of St. Maur took it on in 1712.[3] It was suppressed in 1790 in the French Revolution.

It has been listed as a historical monument since 1908.

References

49.28°N -0.6887°W

Notes and References

  1. http://data.bnf.fr/10165657/prieure_saint-vigor_saint-vigor-le-grand__calvados_1096-1658/ BNF: Prieuré Saint-Vigor. Saint-Vigor-le-Grand, Calvados
  2. Honoré Fisquet, La France pontificale (Gallia christiana), E. Repos, Paris, 1864-1873, pp. 175-178
  3. http://www.histoire-locale.fr/Modules/Journaux/pdf/12022009.pdf Essai historique sur le Prieuré de Saint-Vigor-le-Grand, by the Abbé Faucon (2009), in "Histoire Locale: feuille périodique" No 720