Allée couverte du Bois-Couturier
Gallery grave · Guiry-en-Vexin
Church building
église Saint-Germain-de-Paris de Cléry-en-Vexin
Saint-Germain-de-Paris is a parish Catholic church located in Cléry-en-Vexin, France. It consists of two relatively homogeneous and well preserved architectural ensembles. One dates back to the beginning of the 13th century and consists of the transept, the central building bell tower and the square choir; the other dates back to the 16th century and includes the nave with its sides.
Started in a style still purely Gothic flamboyant, the south side already has finishes in the Renaissance style. The riches of the church are its elegant bell tower, which perhaps inspired that of Auvers-sur-Oise, the western portal richly carved in flamboyant Gothic style, the beautiful arches of warheads of origin from the cross of the transept, the north crusillon and the choir, and the curious ornamentation of the three vaults of the nave. The church has been listed as a historic monument since 1929.
It is affiliated with the western Vexin pastoral sector with its headquarters in Magny-en-Vexin, and Sunday Masses are celebrated only irregularly, twice a year.