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Routes
Road cycling routes
France
Centre-Val de Loire

Saint Hilaire Church – Château de Châteaudun loop from Châteaudun

Routes
Road cycling routes
France
Centre-Val de Loire

Saint Hilaire Church – Château de Châteaudun loop from Châteaudun

Easy

4.0

(2)

16

riders

Saint Hilaire Church – Château de Châteaudun loop from Châteaudun

01:24

32.1km

200m

Road cycling

Easy road ride. Great for any fitness level. Mostly well-paved surfaces and easy to ride. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: March 20, 2026

Waypoints

A

Start point

Train Station

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1

1.27 km

Former chapel known as Notre-Dame du Champdé

Highlight • Other

The chapel dedicated to the Virgin, erected at the beginning of the 16th century, was set on fire by lightning in 1878 and completely destroyed. Only the Gothic style western facade and its bell tower were consolidated and restored in 1887 in order to serve as a monumental portal to the adjoining Champdé cemetery.

The large late flamboyant Gothic portal, at the center of a richly decorated facade, is composed of a large third-point arch and two twin basket-handle doors framed by flowered buttresses. The harmony of the proportions, the quality of the work and the refinement of the decorations make these remains a historical monument in their own right. The facade of the chapel is visible from the outside at the entrance to the Champdé cemetery.

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2

18.5 km

The bridge that crosses the Loir at Montigny-le-Gannelon offers a beautiful viewpoint below the castle. The splendid facades of this Renaissance-style building are clearly visible. A feast for the eyes.

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3

19.1 km

The church of Saint-Sauveur-Saint-Gilles and the castle of Montigny-le-Gannelon Montigny-le-Gannelon are wonderful. You just have to go over the mountain.

Montigny-le-Gannelon Castle dates from the Renaissance period; it was redesigned during the course of a restoration in the 19th century Neo-Gothic.

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4

22.3 km

Saint Hilaire Church

Highlight • Other

Placed under the patronage of Saint Hilaire, this parish was given by Gannelon de Montigny, lord of the place, to the abbey of Marmoutier around 1042. Its reconstruction probably dates from this period; it then became a priory. The church has a rectangular nave ending in a choir with a flat chevet. An examination of the masonry easily reveals two distinct periods of construction: the Romanesque period and the Renaissance. Built of flint rubble with rendering, the western part of the building appears to date from the 11th or 12th century. A limestone cornice supported by rather crude corbels underlines the base of the roof. To the south, two narrow Romanesque windows flared inwards light the nave. To the north, the bays were later reworked and enlarged. On this same side, a Romanesque doorway was walled up; It allowed the church to connect with a building whose traces of detachment remain.

The bell tower was built to the north of the Romanesque nave, extending the western façade. The absence of a connection between the east and west walls of the bell tower and the north wall of the nave clearly indicates that it is an entirely later construction. However, its crowning is much later, as evidenced by its cornice, whose molding is in the classical style. Flanked by obliquely angled buttresses, it is covered with a saddleback roof.

The eastern half of the church appears to be an extension built during the Renaissance period. Its ogee-shaped cornice and the decoration of the eastern gable, as well as the moldings of the buttress bands, attest to this dating. A vast rectangular choir then appears to have replaced a semicircular Romanesque apse; the eastern gable and the southern and northern façades were then pierced with networked bays. In the lower part of the north façade, projecting ashlars appear to have supported the roof of a lean-to building. To the south, a sacristy was built in the 19th century.

Inside, the entire building is covered with a paneled vault with exposed tie beams and kingposts. The 18th-century high altar is surmounted by an Assumption of the Virgin inspired by Murillo's.

For the restoration of the roofs and façades, the Sauvegarde de l'Art Français (French National Art Protection Agency) awarded a grant of €30,490 in 2001.

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5

24.0 km

The Church of Saint Sauveur La Trinité, probably built in the 12th century, is notable for its Romanesque windows with columns and capitals. On its walls, alternating with the consecration crosses, one can admire a Stations of the Cross in blue enamel on earthenware. The choir is lit by five Romanesque windows decorated with stained glass depicting Our Lord and the four Evangelists.

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6

30.2 km

Château de Châteaudun

Highlight • Historical Site

The castle is already impressive, with the size, the location and the incredible "wall". It is the residence of a faithful companion to Joan of Arc. John of Dunois, known as "Bastard of Orleans" and half-brother of King Charles VI, transformed the old Feudalburg into a bright, comfortable apartment and added the Holy Chapel. His grandson, Francis II of Orleans-Longueville, extended the castle with a Renaissance-style wing, which heralded the great castles of the Loire Valley. The work began around 1450, but were completed in 1530.

chateau-chateaudun.fr

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7

30.7 km

Church of the Madeleine of Châteaudun

Highlight • Religious Site

The construction of the old Madeleine abbey dates back to the middle of the 12th century. This large Romanesque building has undergone successive alterations as well as a long restoration following a fire in 1940 but it remains the largest and most majestic religious building in the city.

The now stripped interior appearance of the building only reinforces the majesty of the place. The beautiful south portal remained hidden behind the medieval city wall for a long time before being rediscovered at the end of the 19th century. Unlike the north facade, it has retained magnificent sculpted arches from the 12th century. The choir was rebuilt in the 16th century without the large ambulatory which previously existed but you can still admire a Renaissance tomb from the beginning of the 16th century in the apse.

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8

30.9 km

This large neo-Renaissance style fountain was inaugurated in 1860 to symbolize the arrival a few years earlier of a modern drinking water supply system in the upper town. It is topped by a dome with lantern and a phoenix, this mythical bird which is reborn from its ashes and which perfectly symbolizes the rebirth of the city after fires, the most important of which was the dramatic fire of 1723.

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B

32.1 km

End point

Train Station

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

30.1 km

826 m

507 m

303 m

196 m

146 m

Surfaces

31.6 km

262 m

128 m

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Elevation

Elevation

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Weather

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Friday 29 May

32°C

17°C

13 %

Additional weather tips

Max wind speed: 10.0 km/h

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Our route recommendations are based on thousands of hikes, rides, and runs completed by other people on komoot.

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