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Routes
Road cycling routes
France
Centre-Val de Loire
Châteaudun
Fontenay-Sur-Conie

Saint Peter's Church – Saint Peter's Church loop from Fontenay-sur-Conie

Routes
Road cycling routes
France
Centre-Val de Loire
Châteaudun
Fontenay-Sur-Conie

Saint Peter's Church – Saint Peter's Church loop from Fontenay-sur-Conie

Moderate

4.0

(1)

3

riders

Saint Peter's Church – Saint Peter's Church loop from Fontenay-sur-Conie

02:37

65.6km

290m

Road cycling

Moderate road ride. Good fitness required. Mostly well-paved surfaces and easy to ride. The starting point of the route is right next to a parking lot.

Last updated: May 9, 2026

Tips

Your route passes through protected areas

Please check local regulations for:

Natura 2000 de Beauce et Vallée de la Conie

Waypoints

A

Start point

Parking

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1

254 m

Church of Saints Cyr and Julitte

Highlight • Other

2

6.17 km

Saint Peter's Church

Highlight • Other

Formerly, the church was the presentation of the abbot of Bonneval because the Saint-Florentin abbey had a priory in Cormainville. A walled arcade, still visible to the south of the choir, represents an ancient communication between the church and the priory.

The building was registered as a historic monument in 1927.

Translated by Google •

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3

16.8 km

Saint Peter's Church

Highlight • Other

Saint-Pierre Church dates back to the 14th century. It is located in Nottonville itself, opposite the town hall. Its 17th-century timber-framed bell tower was restored following the 1999 storm.

Translated by Google •

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4

28.5 km

Saint Peter's Church

Highlight • Other

The church consists of a single nave, extended by a single-bay choir, and a semicircular apse. Two canted chapels, forming a false transept, were added during this renovation. The church is dominated by a timber-framed bell tower that rises above the first bay of the nave. The gable of the western facade was rebuilt in the last century, an external wooden porch removed. The central axis of the current facade is punctuated by a semicircular door surmounted by an archivolt, a circular opening on the first level and a small window pierced in the upper part of the gable. On the north side, a highly raised stringcourse forming a cornice, resting on simple modillions, still survives in the upper part of the wall. Additional openings were added to the old, narrow, and uneven openings in the last century, in the nave, as well as in the choir and apse, to allow more daylight to enter the building.

The interior of the church is covered with a paneled roof structure: the one covering the nave is believed to date from the 16th century. The entire structure has been given a coherent decoration, from the faux-stone plasterwork to the paneled vault, the furnishings, and the statuary. The church also boasts a 17th-century polychrome wooden statue of Saint Barbara. The Prunelé coat of arms appears at the bottom of the stained-glass window of Saint Louis and, outside, on a medallion on the apse wall.

The Sauvegarde de l'Art Français (French National Art Protection Agency) granted €5,000 in grants in 2004 for masonry and roof repairs and the installation of drainage.

Translated by Google •

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5

44.3 km

Saint-André Church

Highlight • Religious Site

The Saint-André church burned down in the middle of the 19th century. The priest, forced to celebrate mass in a barn, opened a subscription in 1864, the church was rebuilt in 1865, according to the original plan, plus a transept. Bell tower-porch.

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6

57.8 km

Saint-Léger Church of Sancheville

Highlight • Religious Site

The Saint-Léger church in Sancheville existed from the 12th century, it was a single nave church. There are remains of this primitive building in four pillars of the nave, at the base of the bell tower and on the south wall.

In the 13th century, the church was rebuilt, the nave was enlarged and vaulted with ribs. The pillars of the Romanesque choir supported a tower built in the 13th century and which burned down on April 13, 1608.

In the 14th century, the main portal with buttresses was built, without a tympanum.

In the 16th century, the north aisle was built and a second portal was built, a remarkable Renaissance ensemble.

Also in the 16th century, at the same time as the vault of the north aisle, the vault of the main nave was redone in a pointed arch.

The current bell tower was built in the 17th century, replacing the burnt tower.

The frame was redone in the 17th century, as was the layout of the sanctuary.

Translated by Google •

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B

65.6 km

End point

Parking

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Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

64.7 km

996 m

Surfaces

64.6 km

1.01 km

< 100 m

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Elevation

Elevation

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Weather

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Friday 29 May

33°C

17°C

14 %

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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