THE ABBEY OF REIGNY was
built in 1134, by the abbot Etienne de Toucy, the monk of Clairvaux
and under the authority of holy Bernard. Located in an exceptional site
in border of the Cure, the land of the
Counts d' Auxerre and Nevers, the abbey stake under the protection of
the pope Eugéne III in 1147 was very powerful and prosperous
in the Middle Ages, and was hosting up to 300
Monks.
In 1370 King of France, Charles V, put the abbey under his
protection and a century later in 1493 Charles VIII made a Royale
foundation. Unfortunately the One hundred years war (La Guerre
de Cent Ans), the Huguenots and the French Revolution damaged considerably
the beautiful building which however kept very interesting vestiges
from its prestigious past : the exceptional Cistercian
dining hall of the XIVth century (there are only three examples
in France) with its elegant nave with double span which preserved its
original polychromie, the room and the dormitory of the monks of which
we visit the row of salons and dining room, which were reorganized by
the monks in the XVIIIth and splendidly furnished, the
gate of the XVIIIth century, a surprising dovecote of the XVIIth
century with 3500 pigeon-holes in terra-cotta, and its two swivelling
ladders.
From the demolished buildings, we can still guess the foundations thanks
to the excavations which enabled to discover the bases of the abbey
church so indicating the initial spread of the abbey.
Furthermore all the Cistercian hydraulic network
was preserved.