Auros, France
9th century AD
Les Herbiers, France
1130
La Chapelle-Launay, France
c. 1160
Cizay-la-Madeleine, France
1129
Saint-Fromond, France
1154
Duhort-Bachen, France
1140
Dragey-Ronthon, France
1137
Masseilles, France
1124
Les Hauts-Talican, France
1147
Talus-Saint-Prix, France
c. 1142
Rouans, France
1135
Grand Est, France
1089
Béruges, France
1120
The Pilgrimage Church of Wies (Wieskirche) is an oval rococo church, designed in the late 1740s by Dominikus Zimmermann. It is located in the foothills of the Alps in the municipality of Steingaden.
The sanctuary of Wies is a pilgrimage church extraordinarily well-preserved in the beautiful setting of an Alpine valley, and is a perfect masterpiece of Rococo art and creative genius, as well as an exceptional testimony to a civilization that has disappeared.
The hamlet of Wies, in 1738, is said to have been the setting of a miracle in which tears were seen on a simple wooden figure of Christ mounted on a column that was no longer venerated by the Premonstratensian monks of the Abbey. A wooden chapel constructed in the fields housed the miraculous statue for some time. However, pilgrims from Germany, Austria, Bohemia, and even Italy became so numerous that the Abbot of the Premonstratensians of Steingaden decided to construct a splendid sanctuary.