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Cemetery en Indre-et-Loire

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Crédit photo : Chevaldin Gilles - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1785
Cemetery Foundation
1789
French Revolution
1802
Restoration of the tomb of Choiseul
1815
Tomb of Léonard Perrault
1962
Registration for Historic Monuments
1997
Creation of the Aurès Memorial
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Tomb of Léonard Perrault (cad. C 1338) : inscription by order of 23 June 1962 ; Tomb of the Duke of Choiseul (Box C 1338) : entry by order of 27 June 1962; Tomb of Henri-Michel d'Amboise (cad. C 1338) : inscription by order of 26 December 1962

Key figures

Étienne-François de Choiseul - Duke of Choiseul, Minister and Marshal Founded the cemetery in 1785.
Léonard Perrault - Protected by the Duke of Choiseul His tomb will be restored in 1802.
Henri-Michel d'Amboise - Last Lord of the Clos-Lucé Alternate deputy in 1789, funeral obelisk.
Michel Debré - Prime Minister and Mayor of Amboise He was buried with his family.
Gonzague Saint-Bris - Writer and journalist Burial in the neo-Gothic family vault.
Jean-Yves Barrier - Architect Designed the Aurès Memorial (1997).

Origin and history

The Ursulines Cemetery, located on Rue des Ursulines in Amboise, is the oldest cemetery in the city. Founded in 1785 on land left by the Duke of Choiseul, it replaces the old parish cemeteries. Its aisles, bordered by sifts, house tombs of local notables, including builders, as well as architectural funeral monuments. A large wrought iron cross marks the location of the remains transferred from the ancient cemeteries, while a stele commemorates the French and German soldiers who died during the Franco-Prussian war of 1870.

The cemetery has been listed as historical monuments since 1962 for three of its graves: the tomb of the Duke of Choiseul (built in 1785, demolished during the Revolution and restored in 1802), the tomb of Léonard Perrault (1815), and the obelisk of Henri-Michel d These marble and stone monuments feature funeral inscriptions and sculptural elements such as pine apples or pyramids. The Aurès Memorial, added in 1997, pays tribute to the harkis, while the less remarkable contemporary part hosts standardized tombs.

Among the figures buried are political figures such as Michel Debré (Prime Minister and Mayor of Amboise) and his family, artists such as writer Gonzague Saint-Bris or actress Betty Daussmond, as well as local notables such as Charles Guinot, mayor and deputy. The cemetery, owned by the commune, thus combines historical heritage, collective memory and architectural diversity, reflecting the social and political history of Amboise since the French Revolution.

The design of the cemetery, with its treed aisles and elaborate funeral monuments, illustrates the evolution of commemorative practices between the 18th and 19th centuries. The choice of noble materials (marble, stone) and symbolic forms (obelisks, pyramids) underscores the social status of the deceased, while subsequent additions, such as the Aurès Memorial, demonstrate its continuing role in local memory. Its inscription in historical monuments in 1962 preserved these heritage elements, while maintaining its primary function as a burial place.

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