Represented in the famous Monasticon gallicanum, it seems clear that the abbey was founded in about 630 by Columbanus, an Irish monk. The dedication was to Saints Peter and Paul.. It reached a height of prosperity in the time of the celebrated Lupus , when the abbey became quite an active literary centre, but the library was destroyed at the same time as the monastery, and only rare fragments survive. One of these, preserved at the Vatican library, recalls the memory of Saint Aldric, Abbot of Ferrières before he became Archbishop of Sens. The Carolingian kings Louis III and his brother Carloman held their joint coronation at the abbey in 879, and were later buried there. It was restored in the 9th century by Louis the Pious and Charles the Bald. Among the last names in the imperfect list of the abbots of Ferrières is that of Louis de Blanchefort, who in the 15th century almost entirely restored the abbey after it was burnt down by the English in the Hundred Years' War. He was buried in its choir. In 1568, the abbey was besieged by the troops of Louis de Condé, Protestant friend of the Coligny family, pillaged and profaned and, although no monks were killed, the reliquaires and treasures of the abbey were dispersed, the tombs there of Louis III, Carloman II and Louis de Blanchefort heavily damaged and the monks' stalls removed. Odet de Coligny only intervened to stop this after three days when his own financial interests in the benefice seemed threatened. After suffering this and other severe damage during the Wars of Religion, Ferrières was rebuilt in the 17th century by the prior Guillaume Morin, but then disappeared with all the ancient abbeys at the time of the French Revolution, and its treasures and library were ruined and scattered.
Buildings
Today only some ruins of the ancient monastic buildings are to be seen. At its height, the abbey occupied a vast enclosed estate with a great cloister and a little cloister. The abbey church is formed of a 12th-century nave and 13th-century transepts and choir. She must have been begun around 1150. On September 29, 1163, Pope Alexander III consecrated the nave whilst it was under construction. The volume of the nave was doubled by a unique second nave to its left, destroyed in 1739 by the collapse of the crossing tower - one can also sees the great arcades linking the two, whose bases alternated between one big column and two doubled smaller ones. It seems there was no plan to vault the main nave, covered instead with a paneled framework. In the right wall, one notices the door that led into the great cloister. The windows, high up because of the cloister, are apparently contemporary with the transept and choir. These were constructed in the first years of the 13th century. The crossing is formed by an octagonal rotonda. This very original plan was maybe imposed on the builders by the presence in this location of some foundations of a Carolingian building, sometimes identified with the choir of the church rebuilt on the orders of Aldaric, abbot from 821 to 828 - visible traces of this foundation include an arch of alternating stone and nated brick on the right rear of the rotonda. The central space is not covered by a cupola but by an arch of ribs radiating out to eight supports. Between the transept chapel and the choir is located a small room. Off the left transept opens a chapel of the 14th century, perhaps replacing a chapel similar to that off the right transept. The choir is covered with a sexpartite arch. Its lateral walls present traces of an 11th-century phase of construction. In the choir is the tomb of Louis de Blanchefort. The crossing carried a tower called a "lead steeple", decorated with eight 2.5m high lead statues and the arms of Louis XIII and the prince of Condé, but destroyed in 1739. The tower steeple, to the left, is very ancient at its base; the floors were remade to in the 13th century; the arrow, at the end of the 15ht. The tympanum of the earlier door of the central nave, today in the open air, was decorated with a scene of Christ in majesty, with Christ as a portrait of Clovis I. In the earlier door of the secondary nave was a capital representing a fight between Pepin the Short and a lion. The glass-windows of the apse date back to the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th, ordered by Louis of Blancafort or his successor Pierre de Martigny. Besides the monastic church, the Notre-Dame de Bethléem chapel, in which is a retable of 1650 by Gilles Guérin, and parts of the convent were preserved, all largely dating to Louis de Blanchefort's 15th century rebuild.