4.4
(12)
330
자전거 타는 사람
38
라이딩
본세(Boncé) 주변의 로드 사이클링은 주로 농업 지역을 통과하는 교통량이 적은 로드 사이클링 코스 네트워크를 제공합니다. 이 지역은 탁 트인 들판, 작은 마을, 완만한 구릉 지형이 특징이며, 다양한 사이클링 능력에 맞는 접근 가능한 지형을 제공합니다. 이 코스들은 종종 조용한 시골길을 따라 이어져 지역 문화 유적지와 평화로운 풍경을 탐험할 수 있게 해줍니다. 이 지역의 지형은 일반적으로 평탄하거나 완만하게 구릉져 있으며, 눈에 띄는 오르막은 없습니다.
마지막 업데이트: 5월 9, 2026
10
자전거 타는 사람
초급용 로드 라이딩. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.
4.0
(3)
12
자전거 타는 사람
30.6km
01:16
130m
130m
초급용 로드 라이딩. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.

무료 회원 가입
8
자전거 타는 사람
11.2km
00:27
50m
50m
초급용 로드 라이딩. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.
5
자전거 타는 사람
65.3km
02:33
210m
210m
보통 도로 자전거 타기. 좋은 체력 필요. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.
5
자전거 타는 사람
51.9km
02:00
150m
150m
초급용 로드 라이딩. 모든 체력 수준에 적합. 지면 대부분이 잘 포장되어 있고 라이딩하기 쉬움.
더 다양한 경로와 다른 탐험가들의 추천을 살펴보세요.
무료 회원 가입
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투어 추천은 다른 사람들이 komoot에서 완료한 수천 개의 활동을 바탕으로 구성되어 있습니다.
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봉세 주변 인기 장소
The oldest document mentioning the Church of Saint-Martin in Fresnay-le-Comte is the charter of Renaud de Mouçon, Bishop of Chartres, confirming the possessions of the Abbey of Marmoutier, near Tours. This charter dates only from the last years of the 12th century, but the church's foundation may have already existed at that time. The building comprises two parts of roughly equal size and from different periods. The older part, roughly corresponding to the nave, is of a rather undefined style. The west portal, with its pointed arch devoid of any decoration, may date back to the 12th or 13th century, as may the first window of the nave, on the right. In the north wall, there is a small, walled-up doorway, whose lintel, adorned with an accolade, is no earlier than the 15th century, but the relieving arch above it appears older, perhaps from the 12th century. Half of the church, including almost the entire chancel, is from a more recent period and easily recognizable. The polygonal apse and the windows with their flamboyant tracery of late design indicate the very end of the 15th century. An inscription on one of the chancel's tie beams gives a precise date: In the year 1529, this chancel was completely rebuilt. The statue of the Virgin Mary was baptized during the Mass of October 30, 2021, by Father Pierre Paul. This statue, moved from the Chapel of the Three Marys in Mignières, was restored by Mr. Martial Moulin, a sculptor from Chartres.
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The church, dedicated to Saint Denis, is located in the diocese of Chartres. It was under the jurisdiction of the Benedictine abbess of Saint-Avit in Châteaudun. It comprises two distinctly contrasting parts: a low Romanesque nave, 17 meters wide by 8.5 meters long, and a taller Gothic chancel, 14 meters wide by 10 meters long. The western doorway, with its semicircular arch, is framed by columns whose bases are molded with two tori and whose capitals are adorned with leaves ending in volutes. The tympanum is plain, surrounded by a molded archivolt, and externally highlighted by an archivolt decorated with a sawtooth pattern, similar to that of the nearby church of Saint-Maur-sur-le-Loir. The western gable, framed by flat buttresses, is pierced above this doorway only by a small semicircular window. The nave's side walls are reinforced with buttresses. The north buttress is blank, while the south one has three windows, two of which, long and narrow, may be original; the third was likely widened later. A side door was added on this side in the 14th century. The chancel, with its flat apse, is topped by a high gable whose sloping sides are decorated with crockets. The central window with flamboyant tracery was walled up to accommodate the large altarpiece. The north wall is blank; only two flamboyant windows with triple lancets illuminate this part of the building on the south side. The structure is punctuated by flat buttresses with offsets. A stone inscription indicates the date of its construction: 1550. Inside, the nave and chancel are not vaulted in stone, as the large number of buttresses might suggest from the outside. They are covered with panelled wooden vaults. In the center of the nave, four wooden pillars and a hexagonal framework support the slate spire that crowns the building. Among the interesting furnishings are a 17th- or 18th-century baptismal font, a painting depicting the Education of the Virgin, a pulpit, a churchwarden's pew, choir stalls, Restoration-era choir paneling, and, most notably, a magnificent and imposing altarpiece from the church of Saint-Germain-les-Alluyes, from where it was transferred in 1812. It is the work of Charles Roscoët, who also worked at the churches of Alluyes and Moriers. The Vitray altarpiece dates from 1669; its central panel is framed by double twisted columns adorned with vine leaves and surmounted by a Baroque pediment in the center of which is a statue of a bishop saint (Saint Germain) between reclining figures. The two wings of the altarpiece, right and left, are topped with twisted columns and adorned with shell-shaped niches intended to hold statues. In 2005, the French Heritage Society (Sauvegarde de l’Art français) awarded a grant of €6,500 for the restoration of the gable, the belfry, and the bell tower roof, as well as the installation of a lightning rod.
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This church in Meslay-Le-Vidame, whose architecture reflects the formal language of antiquity, was dedicated to the patron saint of Saint Etienne. He was one of the first seven deacons of the original Jerusalem church and, according to the biblical accounts in the New Testament, the first martyr (martyr) of early Christianity. The church commemorates his death on Boxing Day, December 26th. As the Acts of the Apostles recounts: When Stephen recounted his vision of the open heavens, "And he, full of the Holy Spirit, looked up into heaven and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God" (Chapter 7, Verse 55), the people were so outraged that they drove him out of the city and stoned him.
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On the night of April 2-3, 1903, a terrible fire completely destroyed the church of Saint-Sulpice. The spire, the roof, and all the furnishings—pews, pulpit, woodwork, altars—were consumed; only the walls remained standing. This church, 23.80 m long and 6.90 m wide, built in the shape of a perfect parallelogram with a straight chevet, formerly lit by a triple lancet window, was flanked on the right by a groin-vaulted chapel 6.10 m wide and 5.55 m deep, and on the left by the bell tower, beneath which was once a chapel, also groin-vaulted, but transformed into a sacristy a few years ago. This tower, reached by a stone staircase, was topped by an octagonal timber-framed spire, elegantly crafted and the tallest in the entire region. This church has been remodeled several times, most recently during the reconstruction of the Chapel of the Blessed Virgin in 1764. However, this dates back to the 16th century, as evidenced by the flamboyant ogival window with two mullions, only the top of which was visible, the lower part having been walled up to accommodate the altarpiece. The second window, on the south side, is semicircular with a mullion, adorned with stained-glass windows with figures of the Blessed Virgin, Saint Anne, and Saint Joachim framed in small medallions painted by Mr. Lorin in 1895. The nave wall received windows of the same style at the same time, but the enormous buttresses and the freestone stringcourse with dripstone were erected in the 16th century. The rest of the church, the gable of the façade with its Romanesque window flanked by two barely protruding pillars, the gable of the chevet with its triple lancet arch, protected by a semicircular arch of dressed stone, the entire north wall, also supported by slightly protruding buttresses and adorned with semicircular windows, and the bell tower, date from the late 12th century. The exterior entablature of the chevet was formed of carved corbels with foliage and strange, crude figures (alternating human heads and rams' heads), irrefutable evidence of this ancient origin. The church was consecrated after the 16th-century restoration, and a beautiful consecration stone with trefoiled ends can still be seen. The church's benefactor had his coat of arms carved on a projecting shield on the corner buttress of the façade gable, and inside the seigneurial tier. The destruction of the woodwork revealed two double oval shields on either side of the high altar, surmounted by a marquis's crown and supported by two greyhounds. The dexter shield bears a gules chevron, accompanied at the top by two roses of the same color and at the base by a cross of Lorraine; the sinister shield reveals a wild boar at the base and two flames or thunderbolts at the top. Could these be the arms of Mre Loup de Cosne? These same shields are found in the Chapel of the Blessed Virgin in four places and in the sacristy. In the Chapel of the Blessed Virgin, a third shield is also found bearing a standing lion, attached to a shield bearing a wild boar and two flames. In 1623, Loup de Cosne, Lord of Vovelle, had a daughter named Francoyse, baptized in Dammarie; in 1653, Charles de Cosne was lord of Loiville and Mre Mangot, lord of Boncé.
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Unfortunately, the church was not accessible when I visited (mid-September 2024). You could only look in through a gate and the dance of death depictions on the left side were not really visible. In front of them were transparencies with skeleton drawings. Maybe those were the depictions...
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Thivars is mentioned in 966 in the Chartres cartulary. In the 12th century, the church became the property of Josaphat Abbey. The current church was built in the 16th century: a date of 1545 is engraved on a cherub in the turret. It is a very high construction but very irregular, this comes from the fact that it belongs to several eras: ogival style in the windows, the entrance door is Romanesque (it may be the door of the first Romanesque church) . The choir was formerly separated from the nave by an iron grille which disappeared during the French Revolution. The ceiling has pretty paneling dating from 1645. The two side altars are dedicated: one to Notre Dame des Victoires and the other to Saint Joseph. Among the furniture we can note an interesting painting which represents Our Lord pronouncing on a coin. In 1940, two bombs fell less than 30 m from the church, destroying the stained glass windows on the south side which were replaced by grisailles in 1987. Three pretty stained glass windows light up this church: Nativity stained glass window installed by Mr Campin in 1955 Stained glass windows of the village's patron saints, Saint Radegonde and Saint Hilaire, installed in 1900 and 1987 respectively.
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The Saint-Germain de Morancez church could date from the 10th century. Its cut stone facade is punctuated by four buttresses framing a portal. This is composed of three concentric arches resting on engaged columns, decorated with capitals. The zigzag decoration of the arches confirms a dating before the 12th century. The occulus surmounting the porch illuminates a semi-circular vaulted nave. This was enlarged with an aisle built much later and where there is an altar dedicated to the Virgin. The furniture remains simple but not without interest with its benches enclosed in painted wood. However, it is worth mentioning a sculpted pulpit from the 18th century. In 1707, the prior-parish priest of Morancez was Nicolas Courvoisier, religious of the Saint-Jean-en-Vallée abbey. A poet, he is notably the author of a Latin ode addressed to the people of Chartres on the death of Paul de Godet des Marais1. He died on May 14, 1742 in Morancez and was buried in the church. (his tombstone remains to be identified.) Although Morancez was a modest parish, in 1851 it benefited from a prestigious gift from Jérôme Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon I, governor of Les Invalides, then in residence at the Château de Gourdez. He offered the church a painting, Moses makes water flow from the rock, painted by Giovanni Francesco Romanelli between 1657 and 1660. This Italian artist had been called to decorate the cabinet called "At the water's edge" of the apartment of Queen Anne of Austria at the Louvre. He created a decor, now dismembered, composed of a set of six paintings devoted to the story of Moses, including the work, classified as a Historic Monument, preserved in our church. Another interesting work which could be attributed to the school of Philippe de Champaigne represents Jesus among the doctors. These two paintings benefited from a restoration in 1998
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The church of Barjouville, without a transept, only includes a nave extended by a narrower choir. The north wall of the nave, with three small round-arched windows, dates from the 13th century. But this oldest sanctuary was burned, along with many others in the region, by the mercenaries of the Huguenot army on March 15, 1568 when they had to lift the siege of the city of Chartres, due to a truce, while they were about to enter through a breach made near the Drouaise gate. The reconstruction lasted almost thirty years (the village was poor) and ended with the installation of the bell, melted in August 1598; it is one of the oldest in the department. To the south, the nave is lit by three bays of different sizes and the choir by two others. The bedside, flat, has three semi-circular bays equipped with stained glass windows installed by the Lorin workshops in 1873 and representing the Sacred Heart, Saint James the Major and Saint Laumer. In one of the bays of the choir, fragments of stained glass have been grouped into two square panels, one representing Saint Nicholas and the three children saved from the salt room and the other, undoubtedly, Saint Christopher carrying the child Jesus on his shoulders to cross the river. Note two statues of Saint James which could be from the 16th century and a Saint Leonard, unfortunately covered with a brown wash. Three processional sticks carry naive-style statues of the Virgin, Saint James and Saint Christopher. Finally, a large painting, which hung at the back of the church, is currently being restored. It is a copy, probably from the 17th century, of a “Madonna and Child with Saint Anne” from 1610 by Carlo Saraceni, the original of which is in the National Museum of Rome (Palace Barberini). Work should soon take place to secure the roof and the bell tower and remove the false ceiling which distorts the interior proportions of the church.
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봉세 지역 주변에는 35개 이상의 차량 통행이 없는 로드 사이클링 코스가 있어, 차 없이 조용하게 라이딩을 즐길 수 있는 다양한 옵션을 제공합니다. 이 코스들은 평화롭고 경치 좋은 경험을 찾는 로드 사이클리스트들을 위해 설계되었습니다.
봉세 지역의 차량 통행이 없는 로드 사이클링 코스는 주로 쉬움에서 보통 수준입니다. 쉬운 코스 24개와 보통 코스 12개가 있어, 초보자부터 약간 더 긴 도전을 원하는 라이더까지 폭넓은 사이클리스트에게 적합합니다. 이 중에서 어려운 코스는 없습니다.
네, 쉬운 코스 중 다수는 교통량이 적고 지형이 대체로 완만하여 가족에게 적합합니다. 예를 들어, 고도 변화가 거의 없고 11km가 조금 넘는 르 골 생 드니 출발, 에글리즈 르 골 생 드니 루프와 같은 코스는 편안한 가족 나들이에 훌륭한 선택이 될 것입니다.
봉세 주변의 차량 통행 없는 코스를 자전거로 달리면서 여러 역사적, 자연적 관심 지점을 발견할 수 있습니다. 목가적인 분위기로 유명한 물랭 드 베르레샤르나 독특한 공원을 갖춘 역사적인 샤토 데 불라르를 방문하는 것을 고려해 보세요. 또한 메슬레르비담의 생 에티엔 교회 또는 테뷔빌의 생 바르틀레미 교회와 같은 매력적인 건축물도 지나칠 수 있습니다.
더 긴 라이딩을 원하는 분들을 위해, 보빌 교회 – 일리에르 콩브레 루프 (보브 출발)와 같은 코스는 약 80km에 달하는 보통 수준의 도전을 제공합니다. 산악 지형은 아니지만, 이 긴 코스들은 시골 풍경을 즐기며 조용한 도로에서 더 오랜 시간을 보낼 수 있게 해줍니다.
봉세는 일년 중 대부분 즐거운 사이클링 환경을 제공합니다. 봄과 가을은 일반적으로 쾌적한 온도와 아름다운 풍경을 선사합니다. 여름에도, 특히 시원한 아침이나 저녁에는 즐거울 수 있습니다. 이 지역은 여유로운 라이딩으로 알려져 있어 다양한 계절에 접근하기 좋습니다.
네, 봉세 주변의 많은 차량 통행 없는 로드 사이클링 코스는 루프 형태로 설계되어 출발점과 도착점이 같습니다. 예를 들어, 르 골 생 드니 출발, 에글리즈 르 골 생 드니 – 들판을 가로지르는 구불구불한 길 루프는 인기 있는 순환 코스로, 편리하고 경치 좋은 라이딩을 제공합니다.
봉세 지역의 차량 통행 없는 로드 사이클링 코스는 komoot 커뮤니티에서 높은 평가를 받고 있으며, 평균 별점은 4.5점입니다. 사이클리스트들은 종종 코스의 평화로움, 매력적인 시골 풍경, 그리고 번잡한 도로에서 벗어나 지역 유산을 탐험할 수 있는 기회를 칭찬합니다.
봉세는 극적인 산악 전망으로 유명하지는 않지만, 많은 코스가 매력적인 시골 풍경을 제공합니다. 예를 들어, 보브 출발, 생 힐레르 교회 – 베르레샤르의 뇌르 강변 루프는 뇌르 강을 따라 이어지며, 특히 물랭 드 베르레샤르 근처에서 즐거운 강변 풍경과 목가적인 분위기를 선사합니다.
봉세 지역의 차량 통행 없는 로드 사이클링 코스는 길이에 따라 다양하며, 다양한 선호도를 충족시킵니다. 에글리즈 르 골 생 드니 루프와 같은 약 11km의 짧은 루프부터 보빌 교회 – 일리에르 콩브레 루프와 같은 약 80km의 긴 라이딩까지 있어, 모든 사이클리스트에게 적합한 거리를 찾을 수 있습니다.
봉세는 '탐험을 기다리는 숨겨진 보석'이 있는 지역으로 묘사됩니다. 르 골 생 드니 출발, 에글리즈 르 골 생 드니 – 생 드니 교회 루프와 같이 덜 알려진 조용한 코스들은 더 많이 찾는 길에서 벗어나 고요한 시골 풍경과 지역의 매력을 발견할 기회를 제공하며 진정한 탐험의 느낌을 선사합니다.
다른 지역의 최고의 로드 사이클링 경로를 살펴보세요.