A medieval French church dating back to the 12th century was demolished in northwestern France on Monday after falling into a state of disrepair. Local residents watched as the centuries-old towers – containing a bell dating from 1584 – was torn down, leaving Christians without a place of worship in the village of La Baconnière. Authorities have announced the church will be replaced by a “symbolic gathering place.”
The building itself, named Saint-Corneille-et-Saint-Cyprien, had stood abandoned since 2014 for “security reasons.” The state of the church was only worsened after the roof was lost in a storm in 2019. The municipality stated that a complete restoration would cost more than six million euros ($6.5 million), which was deemed too much to save the medieval landmark.
An online petition receiving some 25,000 signatures was launched after the council announced its demolition plans, though it had little impact. One local resident who watched the church destruction described hearing the bells ring for the final time as “a funeral bell.”
This situation is far from new in Europe. Churches have been falling into ruin and shuttering across the continent for decades. More than 400 churches closed between 2010 and 2019 in the United Kingdom alone. That number grows to nearly 1,000 between 1987 and 2019. There is a similar trend in Germany, with over 40,000 rectories, community centers, and places of worship, expected to close by 2040 as congregation numbers dwindle amidst a rise in leftist leadership in Western churches.
WATCH:
Yesterday the Church of St Cornelius & St Cyprian in La Baconnière (northwest France) was demolished.
It dated back to the 12th century (rebuilt in the 19th), with a bell from 1584 & stained glass windows by Auguste Alleaume.
It will be replaced by a "symbolic gathering place". pic.twitter.com/31CWYCTD0y
— Shayan Barjesteh van Waalwijk van Doorn (@theiconographer) August 2, 2023