Saint-Michel-en-l'Herm, France
682 AD
Bricquebec, France
1824
Saint-Sever-Calvados, France
10th century
La Meilleraye-de-Bretagne, France
1134-1183
Laon, France
11th century
Domfessel, France
1340
Bourdons-sur-Rognon, France
1121
Parnoy-en-Bassigny, France
1115
Auvers, France
13th century
Corte, France
9th century AD
Jard-sur-Mer, France
1197
Saint-Thierry, France
12th century
Soultz-les-Bains, France
12th century
Luzé, France
1138
Brévands, France
13th century
Montebourg, France
1066-1087
Valognes, France
12th century
Égligny, France
1118
Gueberschwihr, France
1105
Saint-Germain-des-Vaux, France
1679
The Chapel of St. Martin is the only completely preserved Romanesque building in Vyšehrad and one of the oldest in Prague. In was built around 1100 in the eastern part of the fortified outer ward. Between 1100 and 1300, the Rotrunda was surrounded by a cemetery. The building survived the Hussite Wars and was used as the municipal prison of the Town of the Vyšehrad Hill.
During the Thirty Years’ War, it was used as gunpowder storage, from 1700 to 1750, it was renovated and reconsecrated. In 1784, the chapel was closed passed to the military management which kept using it as a warehouseand a cannon-amunition manufacturing facility. In 1841, it was meant to be demolished to give way to the construction of a new road through Vyšehrad. Eventually, only the original western entrance was walled up and replaced with a new one in the sountren side. The dilapidating Rotunda subsequently served as a shelter for the poor.