4.1
(5)
147
자전거 타는 사람
8
라이딩
Courtalain 주변의 교통 없는 도로 사이클링 코스는 다양한 풍경과 역사적인 경로가 특징인 그림 같은 Perche-Gouët 지역을 가로지릅니다. 이 지역은 Loir 강을 따라 흐르는 곳과 같은 완만한 강 계곡을 특징으로 하며, Château de Courtalain과 같은 역사적인 랜드마크의 전망을 제공합니다. 사이클리스트는 잘 포장된 노면과 조용한 시골길이 혼합된 다양한 지형을 탐험할 수 있습니다. 이 지역의 지형은 일반적으로 고도 상승이 최소화되어 다양한 체력 수준에 접근 가능합니다.
마지막 업데이트: 5월 8, 2026
4
자전거 타는 사람
44.4km
01:44
170m
170m
초급용 로드 라이딩. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.
3
자전거 타는 사람
24.3km
01:01
70m
70m
초급용 로드 라이딩. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.

무료 회원 가입
2
자전거 타는 사람
59.2km
02:24
300m
300m
보통 도로 자전거 타기. 좋은 체력 필요. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.
2
자전거 타는 사람
34.3km
01:25
190m
190m
초급용 로드 라이딩. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.
2
자전거 타는 사람
19.4km
00:44
50m
50m
초급용 로드 라이딩. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.
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The church dates from the 12th century and was remodeled in the 15th or 16th century, its buttresses and bell tower date from the 19th century. It houses a wrought iron communion table from the 18th century.
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In 1133, Geoffroi, Viscount of Châteaudun, founded a priory dependent on the abbey of Tiron, in the diocese of Chartres, in this place. When he died, his wife, Helvise de Mondoubleau, built the church around 1140. The church is formed of a long nave ending in a semicircular apse. It has retained several narrow bays, with a semicircular arch, very flared towards the inside. In the 16th century, a chapel was added to the south of the church, a paneling with exposed tie beams above the nave and the choir, and a mass of carpentry to the west which supports the spire of the bell tower on pointed arches. The choir has a trefoiled piscina from the 14th century. In 1660, Jean Gry, a carpenter from Vendôme, executed the altarpiece and the following year, Pierre Janvier, a painter from Mondoubleau, painted the Resurrection which decorates it. The church houses two funerary slabs, one of a priest who died in 1658, the other of François Leboulx, Lord of Chauvellières, who died in 1691.
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This church contains 14th century wall paintings. These paintings were discovered in 1895. They formerly occupied the entire width of the western wall of the nave. The central part was destroyed following the renovation of the door. The left side represented paradise. Of the bust of Christ, in a trilobed medallion, which occupied the center, there remains only a fragment of the cruciform halo. The rest of the composition is divided into rectangular compartments, each enclosing, in the surviving part, a figure of a crowned chosen one. On the right, hell is represented by a cauldron in which several characters are immersed, including a pope, a bishop, a monk, a king, a queen. Above, a woman with her legs apart. On the right, an enormous horned demon sticks out its tongue. On the left, another carries a basket filled with the damned and is about to plunge a woman into the cauldron. Construction periods: 14th century
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The Saint-Lubin church, built on a sloping site, is a vast building with juxtaposed constructions, bearing witness to renovations and additions up to the 19th century, the oldest distinguished by the presence of grison, the most recent by limestone and flint. The sanctuary was ceded in 1077 by the monks of Saint-Denis de Nogent-le-Rotrou to the monks of the Saint-Père de Chartres abbey. Built in the 11th-12th century, the nave extended by a semi-circular apse is the oldest part of the church, in Romanesque style. In the thickness of the north walls of the nave are still visible the grison bonds which bear witness to the original openings. The building was considerably enlarged in the 15th and 16th centuries by the construction of a large transept, formed of two chapels, and a south aisle forming an alignment of gables attached to the slopes decorated with leafy motifs and finished with chimeras. The construction of the north aisle, just begun, was not finished. On the outside, on the west wall of the chapel, we can see the beginning of a first bay (stone arch and walls removed that remained unfinished). On the gable of the north transept, the walled door can be seen from the pointed arch and the ornate pinnacles, characteristic of the end of the 15th century. In the center, two animals present a coat of arms. On each side of the door, niches with canopies once housed statues. Above, we can still see a coat of arms presented by two bearded figures and probably surmounted by God the Father. According to local tradition, all or part of the extensions were due to the generosity of Florimont Robertet, who owned the barony of Brou from 1509 until his death in 1527, and it was because of this that the work was interrupted. Occupied by the revolutionaries, the building became a ten-day temple in 1794; it was finally returned to worship in 1802. Burnt down by lightning in 1813, the upper part of the bell tower, which was a slender spire, was replaced by the construction of a square limestone tower pierced with louvers. On the southern part of the bell tower, a turret provides access to the bells. In the southern part of the nave, a door, now blocked and highlighted by a basket-handle arch topped with a pinnacle, provided access to the cemetery that once surrounded the church. The building can boast of having preserved very uniform oak furniture, most of which was made in the second half of the 18th century.
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Building from the 12th, 15th and 17th centuries, remarkable from a distance with its bell tower whose spire soars 52 m high. The vault of the vast nave is paneled in Norwegian fir. The Renaissance entrance door is topped with a double pediment. The church has 17th century furniture of Breton inspiration, the sculptures of which are the work of the Breton Charles Roscouët. The baptismal font and the furniture of the sacristy are also worthy of interest. Relics of Saint-Constance, given to the church of Yèvres in 1678 by Lord Cyprien Besnard de Rezey, Advisor to the King and Intendant of Finances, with the approval of Mgr Ferdinand de Neufville de Villeroy, Bishop of Chartres, whose portrait is prominently placed in the nave of the church. The visit ends with the "chapier", a piece of furniture with semi-circular drawers, which contains, "flat", an exceptional collection of priestly vestments and accessories. Recent work on the south porch has revealed exterior fonts and attractive moldings on the pillars.
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The Saint Hilaire church is a vast building from the end of the 11th or 12th century which originally consisted of only a nave with choir and semi-circular apse supported by slightly protruding buttresses made of grison, an extremely hard ferruginous agglomerate which does not allow any work. of sculpture. You can see the primitive work in the walls of the nave and the choir with its small windows and the exterior buttresses in gray. Its appearance was considerably modified during the Renaissance period, when a transept was added, then during a second campaign of transformations, the small side chapels of the choir covered with ribbed vaults with vines and tiers which would have had to be topped with a pavilion roof. The entire monument is covered with a paneled vault with visible beams and hallmarks; above the sanctuary the shingle decorated with arabesques and painted cherubs' heads bears the date 1561. In the 17th century, like many churches of the time, the glass roof at the bottom of the apse was closed to build an altarpiece then fashionable, as it is today with the woodwork that accompanies it. On the west side of the north transept, above the small shed, we can clearly see in the masonry a stone arch which is perhaps the beginning of the cloister mentioned in the archives. In addition to the charm of its Renaissance parts, this church is fortunate to have beautiful furniture from the 17th and 18th centuries which preserves the appearance it had under the Ancien Régime: a lectern dated 1754, modified in 1784 with a antiphonary and a Chartres gradual from 1784. It is in perfect condition, as the cantors must have used it before the revolution. Another valuable piece, the solid oak work bench, cleaned a few years ago of the paint with which it had been decorated, and which now serves as an altar to meet the new standards of the liturgy for the mass facing the faithful.
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The 12th century church of Saint Jean-Baptiste de Courtalain, already repaired in 1592, was rebuilt in 1809, increased by an aisle in 1838, then by a remarkable porch bell tower topped with a twelve meter spire. height, thanks to the generosity of the Montmorency family, owner of the castle. It is to Guillaume Davaugour and Perette de Baïf, his wife, that we attribute the erection of the Courtalain chapel into a parish church; The church is located in the immediate perimeter of the castle. The entire building is partly covered with flat tiles for the roof of the nave, the bell tower, the staircase turret; the three cut sides of the apse and the lower north side are covered in natural slate. Inside the nave is a Mutin Cavaillé Coll organ dating from 1936. It contains several interesting paintings.
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The parish church of Saint-Pellerin, whose oriented plan is reduced to a simple rectangle, only retains a few vestiges of the Romanesque period: part of the southern wall, itself repaired several times. The building, which was struck by lightning, was restored in 1821 with the reconstruction of a beautiful molded frame with tie beams. On the north side a chapel opens onto the nave through two arcades which rest on cylindrical columns. The flat bedside is pierced by a large window with three lancets topped with flamboyant tracery. The western facade is dominated by a triangular gable whose slopes are decorated with kale and dogs sitting on piles of loads, the Renaissance style portal is decorated with a large shell surmounted by a sculpted base of a angel holding a shield. On the north and south sides, thick glaciated buttresses support the gutter walls. The Safeguarding of French Art granted aid of 25,000 F in 1993 to restore the flat tile roof and the slate bell tower.
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코르탈랭 주변에는 9개의 전용 교통량이 적은 로드 사이클링 코스가 있으며, 외르에루아르 지역의 고요한 풍경을 탐험할 수 있도록 다양한 거리와 난이도를 제공합니다.
코르탈랭 주변의 코스들은 일반적으로 다양한 풍경을 특징으로 하며, 최소한의 고도 상승이 있는 쉬운 라이딩부터 완만한 언덕이 포함된 좀 더 중간 난이도의 코스까지 다양합니다. 예를 들어, 랑게이에서 출발하는 중간 난이도 코스인 생힐레르 교회 – 생마르크 교회 루프는 77km 거리에 약 468미터의 고도 상승이 있는 반면, 코르탈랭 생펠레랭에서 출발하는 노트르담 교회 – 생펠레랭 교회 루프와 같은 쉬운 코스는 24km 거리에 70미터의 상승량만 있습니다.
네, 코르탈랭에는 초보자나 편안한 라이딩을 원하는 분들에게 완벽한 여러 개의 쉬운 교통량이 적은 로드 사이클링 코스가 있습니다. 9개 코스 중 4개는 쉬움으로 분류되며, 약 24km 길이의 노트르담 교회 – 생펠레랭 교회 루프 (코르탈랭 생펠레랭 출발) 또는 약 34km를 달리는 생마르크 교회 – 생펠레랭 교회 루프 (코르탈랭 생펠레랭 출발)와 같은 코스가 있습니다.
많은 코스가 중요한 역사 유적지를 지나갑니다. 종종 코르탈랭의 생장밥티스트 교회, 생힐레르 교회, 또는 노트르담 교회와 같은 매력적인 교회를 볼 수 있습니다. 또한, 일부 코스는 아름다운 르네상스 양식의 외관으로 유명한 몽티니르가넬롱 성과 같은 인상적인 건축물의 전망을 제공합니다.
네, 나열된 모든 교통량이 적은 로드 사이클링 코스는 순환 루프로 설계되어 같은 장소에서 출발하고 돌아올 수 있습니다. 여기에는 투사르에서 출발하는 쉬운 44km 라이딩인 생뤼뱅 교회 – 예브르의 노트르담 교회 루프도 포함됩니다.
코무트 커뮤니티는 코르탈랭에서의 로드 사이클링 경험을 매우 높이 평가하며, 평균 점수는 별 5개 중 4.1점입니다. 리뷰어들은 종종 조용한 시골길, 페르슈구에 지역의 그림 같은 풍경, 그리고 차량 통행의 방해 없이 역사적인 '숨겨진 보석'을 발견할 기회를 칭찬합니다.
코르탈랭이 위치한 외르에루아르 지역은 일반적으로 봄부터 가을까지 쾌적한 사이클링 조건을 제공합니다. 봄에는 꽃이 만발한 풍경을 볼 수 있고, 가을에는 아름다운 단풍을 즐길 수 있습니다. 여름도 적합하지만, 최적의 라이딩 편안함을 위해 항상 현지 일기 예보를 확인하는 것이 좋습니다.
특정 전망대가 항상 표시되어 있는 것은 아니지만, 이 지역은 그림 같은 풍경으로 유명합니다. 루아르 강을 건너는 다리에서 바라보는 몽티니르가넬롱 성의 모습은 강 계곡을 지나는 코스에서 만날 수 있는 특히 강조되는 경치 좋은 장소입니다.
현재 이용 가능한 가장 긴 교통량이 적은 로드 사이클링 코스는 랑게이에서 출발하는 생힐레르 교회 – 생마르크 교회 루프입니다. 이 중간 난이도 코스는 약 77킬로미터에 달하며, 지역의 다양한 풍경을 가로지르는 더 긴 라이딩을 제공합니다.
각 코스 시작 지점에 대한 구체적인 주차 정보는 자세히 나와 있지 않지만, 코르탈랭과 주변 마을은 일반적으로 접근 가능합니다. 종종 마을 중심가나 코르탈랭 성과 같은 지역 명소 근처에서 공영 주차장을 찾을 수 있으며, 이는 라이딩의 편리한 시작점이 될 수 있습니다.
네, 많은 코스가 매력적인 마을이나 도시를 통과하거나 근처를 지나갑니다. 사이클링을 하면서 역사적인 코르탈랭 성이 있는 코르탈랭 자체와 같은 장소나 지역 생활 및 건축을 엿볼 수 있는 다른 작은 마을들을 만날 수 있습니다. 더 긴 라이딩은 역사적으로 중요한 샤토던 또는 방돔과 같은 더 큰 도시 근처까지 갈 수도 있습니다.
다른 지역의 최고의 로드 사이클링 경로를 살펴보세요.