Saint-Claude Cathedral

Saint-Claude Cathedral (French: Cathédrale Saint-Pierre, Saint-Paul et Saint-André de Saint-Claude) is a Roman Catholic cathedral dedicated to Saint Peter, Saint Paul and Saint Andrew,[1] and a national monument of France, located in the town of Saint-Claude.[2]

Saint-Claude Cathedral
The nave of Saint-Claude Cathedral
The so-called "Holbein Altar" (Autel d'Olbein) inside the cathedral

The present cathedral was previously the church of the former Condat Abbey (founded in the 5th century), which with the village that grew up round it soon acquired the name of Saint-Oyand or Saint-Oyend after Saint Eugendus (d. 510), fourth abbot and a popular saint. In 687 Saint Claudius resigned as Bishop of Besançon and became the twelfth abbot. After he died, in 696, his grave became a very popular pilgrimage centre, to the extent that by the thirteenth century, the name "Saint-Claude" had become more used than that of "Saint-Oyand", which it superseded.[3]

The Bishopric of Saint-Claude was created in 1742, out of the parishes in the care of the abbey. The abbey church, built in the 15th century, became the cathedral.

Burials

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References

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  1. ^ commonly shortened to Saint Peter
  2. ^ Base Mérimée: IA39000775, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French) église abbatiale de l'abbaye Saint-Oyend, actuellement cathédrale Saint-Pierre, Saint-Paul et Saint-André
  3. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia: St. Eugendus
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46°23′11″N 5°51′59″E / 46.38639°N 5.86639°E / 46.38639; 5.86639