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Protestant Temple à Calmont en Haute-Garonne

Haute-Garonne

Protestant Temple

    1 Rue du Temple
    31560 Calmont
Crédit photo : Jack ma - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1560
Conversion of Calmont to the Reformation
1625
Destruction of the First Temple
1804
Headquarters of the Consistory in Calmont
1835
Current temple project
1846
Completion of the temple
2015
Monument protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The Protestant temple, sis rue du Temple, in full, as delimited on the plan annexed to the decree (Box AK 109): inscription by decree of 20 May 2015

Key figures

Jeanne d'Albret - Countess of Foix Reformator in Calmont.
François de Château-Verdun - Sénéchal of Foix County Next of Jeanne d'Albret in conversion.
Jean-Pierre Laffon - Departmental architect Designer of the current temple in 1846.
François Fonta - Entrepreneur Realized the work for 17 372.88 francs.
Marie-Emmanuelle Desmoulins - Historical Author of the census file in 2014.

Origin and history

The Protestant Temple of Calmont, located on Temple Street, is a neoclassical architecture building built in the 19th century. Very sober and undenatured, it is 23.80 m long for 9.70 m wide, with an apparent brick facade decorated with four doric pilasters and a small bell tower surmounted by a girouette. Inside, the room adopts a basilical plan with an apse housing the pastoral chair, accessible by a staircase leading also to the room of the presbyteral council. Two golden wooden chandeliers and a white marble communion table complete the original furnishings.

The Protestant history of Calmont dates back to 1560, when Jeanne d'Albret, Countess of Foix, converted to the Reformation, was imitated by local lords such as François de Château-Verdun. The city became a major home of regional Protestantism, including the seat of the Consistory before Toulouse in 1804. The present temple, the fourth building built on the site, replaces three precedents: the first, destroyed in 1625, the second in 1641, and the third, located on the riverside, deemed unsatisfactory in 1841.

The construction of the present temple was entrusted to the departmental architect Jean-Pierre Laffon in 1835, for an initial cost estimated at 27,377 francs. Faced with the financial difficulties of the community, the project was revised to 19,287.63 francs and completed in 1846 under the direction of Laffon. A bell tower was added in 1846 to house a bell offered by Londoners. The building, which has been fully protected since 2015, retains original elements such as metopes, triglyphs and a false ceiling replacing the old plaster vault.

The temple bears witness to the persistence of Protestantism in the region, despite the successive destruction of its places of worship. Its clean architecture and its turbulent history make it a symbol of the resilience of the reformed communities in Occitanie, marked by figures such as Jeanne d'Albret and local architects such as Laffon.

External links