Berengaria of Nevarre
Queen of Richard the Lion Heart
L'Epau Abbey
 
Travelling Monument – Travelling Queen?
   Queen Berengaria died in Le Mans at the end of the year 1230 at about the age of 60, and was buried outside the city in her foundation, the abbey of L’Épau. There is no record of the exact site of her burial but, as the abbey church itself was not completed until the first half of the 14th century, the grave must have been elsewhere, most likely, as was the Cistercian practice, in the chapter house.The effigy and the original  tomb chest date from the latter part of the 13th century; however this tomb chest is now lost, apart from some fragments which are now fixed to the wall in the abbey .

Illustrations:
Left Top: L'Epau Abbey: part of nave, south transept and remains of cloisters. The chapter house is on the right.
Above: Berengaria's monument in the chapter house.
Left Bottom: Fragments of original tomb chest.


M. de Gaignières Provides Some Clues
  In later seventeenth century the French antiquary Roger de Gaignières commissioned artists to record the antiquities of France. At l’Epau the artist was Louis Boudan, who recorded a wall mounted bronze plaque (now lost) with a Latin inscription referring to the foundation of the abbey by Berengaria and stating that in 1609 the Queen was ‘buried in this spot’. This would seem to indicate that the monument at that time stood near the site of the plaque, against the wall of the choir. However, excavations carried out in the mid 20th century did not discover any burial vault or sarcophagus in this area.

  In 1672, according to an inscribed slate (which see below) the monument was moved to ‘a more sacred place’ presumably before the high altar. At this time also a new tomb chest – the one drawn by Stothard – was constructed. The late 1600's were a period when the abbey had fallen into decay and was undergoing much restoration work.   The several drawings commissioned by Gaignières include one of the monument and a plan showing it to be then situated in the choir. Furthermore a plan of the chapter house shows a series of inscribed stones which, at the end of the 100 years' war, had been laid to indicate the various burials in that place; only one site remained unmarked and that was the vault to the right of the entrance which was discovered in 1960, and which is described below.

Illustration Left: Drawing of effigy and tomb chest in Gaigniéres



Mr Stothard Seeks and Finds
   
   Charles Stothard, the English antiquarian draughtsman, visited L’Épau Abbey in 1816 to see if Berengaria’s tomb had survived the Revolution only to find the abbey church a ruin and converted into a barn.  He reported that fragments of the tomb chest were found ‘lying about the place’ but the Queen’s effigy was concealed under a ‘considerable quantity of wheat’.

   After ‘many difficulties’ (which he does not specify) and the delay of a year, the effigy was eventually found standing upright in a niche, in excellent preservation apart from the loss of the left arm, parts of which were subsequently discovered. He also reported that Berengaria’s bones were found lying near the effigy. He located three men who had assisted in the destruction of the monument and who told him that it had originally stood at the centre of the aisle at the east end of the church and, although there was no coffin inside the tomb chest, there had been a small box ('mortuary chest') containing bones, some linen, some stuff embroidered with gold and an engraved slate.
    
 

Illustrations:
Left: Stothard's etching of the effigy
Above:
Stothard's drawing of effigy on the 'new' tomb chest.
Right:
 Stothard's etching coloured according to polychrome fragments.
 
   This slate was found to be in the possession of a canon of Le Mans Cathedral, which in Stothard’s time was undergoing restoration, and it was suggested to the superintendent of that work that the tomb be moved to the safety of the Cathedral.  

   This was duly carried out in the December of 1821 and the monument was placed in the Chapel of the Crucifix. An engraved  bronze plaque was attached to the tomb

   

Illustrations:
Left: The engraved slate found inside the box (Property of the General Council of Sarthe Department)
Above: The bronze plate later attched to the new tomb chest.
The inscriptions, translated, are reproduced below.

This tomb of the most serene Berengaria, Queen of England, the noble founder of this monastery was restored and moved to this more sacred place. In it again were deposited the bones which were found in the ancient sepulchre, on the 27th May, in the year of Our Lord 1672. This mausoleum dedicated to Berengaria, most serene Queen of the English and foundress of this monastery, was restored and relocated in this most solemn place and in it were placed the bones which were found in the ancient grave 1672. It was taken from the abbey of Pietas Dei and replaced in the Cathedral Church 2nd December 1821
 
   In 1861 the monument was moved to make way for that of Monsignor Bouvier and re-sited in the nave. In 1920 it was again moved back to near its original position to make way for a war memorial

M. Triger Opens the Box
 
 
   On this last mentioned occasion (1920) the historian Robert Triger published details of the mortuary chest, which remained in the tomb chest, and its contents. The box was of oak measuring 0.22 m square by 0.17 m in height and carried a Latin inscription painted in black:
The bones of Berengaria 1230-1672-1821-1861
     
   The years describe the box’s various perambulations. The contents were as follows:

1. A bottle sealed with red wax containing a report of the translation of 1861 and a coin of 1858 and two of 1854.
2. Several long bones wrapped in linen: two matching femurs, a portion of a left tibia, and a portion of a femur belonging to a young girl of between 15 and 16.
3. The above mentioned inscribed slate plate.  
  
   The chest was then resealed and a new report and several coins of the time added to the contents. Note that fabric mentioned by Stothard had disappeared and there was no report about the translation from l’Epau.

M. Térouanne Seeks and Finds
  
   M. Pierre Térouanne in June 1960 uncovered in the Chapter House of L’Épau Abbey a burial vault in which, under a pile of debris, lay a skeleton of a woman; this skeleton was correctly articulated, having become set into the solidified material in the floor of this vault. Only the skull had become detached and had suffered some minor damage, possible when the vault had been filled in at a later date.  

   The bones were examined in 1963 in the University of Caen’s department of anthropology by a team led by Dr Dastugue, who reported that the skeleton was that of a woman of 60 – 65 years of age and 1.57 m tall. There were fragments of brass attached to the skull which were thought to be remnants of a crown which had been removed at some point.  
   Furthermore the excavations show the foundations of benches around the wall of the chapter house. However there is a break in the continuity of  these around the vault which may well indicate that the monument originally stood over the vault and the space was left for the monks to surround the tomb.

Putting it all Together
 
   From the discussion above we can conclude that Berengaria was buried in the chapter house in the vault discovered in 1960 on which later was placed the effigy on its original tomb chest. During the 100 years war, in fear of the looting that was to come, the monks fled from the abbey taking with them all portable valuables to the relative safety of Le Mans. The monks may then have opened the vault, removed the crown from Berengaria’s head with any other valuables and filled the vault with rubble to hide her skeleton. They may well have removed some bones from the nearby lay cemetery and put them in the tomb chest to act as a decoy preventing the looters desecrating the Queen’s actual grave.   The tomb was moved into the abbey church in 1609 and again in 1679 when the effigy was restored and a new tomb chest constructed. Charles Stothard discovered the monument dismantled in 1816 in the abbey church and it was subsequently moved into Le Mans Cathedral where a bronze inscription was added. Here it was moved several times and the mortuary chest in the tomb chest opened and examined.



Above and Below: Berengaria's monument in the chapter house today

All Together Again
   In 1984 Berengaria’s effigy was returned to l’Epau without its 17th century tomb chest and mortuary chest. Initially the effigy was placed in one of the chapels in the abbey church and a new base constructed; in 1988 the monument returned to its original place, over the vault in the chapter house. The plate describing its removal to Le Mans Cathedral was reattached to the new base, although now giving a rather confusing account.  
 
 
References
Stothard, Charles A., Monumental Effigies of Great Britain. (The Author, London 1817 – 1832)
Bouton, Étienne, Kervalla, Gilles; Niaussat, Michel, L'Épau, L'Abbaye d'une Reine (Éditions de la Reinette, 199)

 

 
Note: Certain people of influence who should have known better but clearly did not, have in the past requested that Berengaria be moved to Fontevraud to rejoin her husband Richard; even more absurdly that all the Plantagent effigies be moved to Westminster Abbey. The French government thankfully did not accede to this request; they can therefore be visited today at a modest cost and examined closely.
 
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