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Aître Saint-Maclou in Rouen en Seine-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Cimetière
Aître
Seine-Maritime

Aître Saint-Maclou in Rouen

    184 Rue de Martainville
    76000 Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Aître Saint-Maclou à Rouen
Crédit photo : Giogo - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1348
Creation of the cemetery
1526-1533
Construction of galleries
1562
Damage to sculptures
1651
Adding the South Gallery
1781
Closure of the cemetery
1862
Historical monument classification
2018-2022
Major renovation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Aître de Saint-Maclou : classification by list of 1862

Key figures

Guillaume Rybert - Architect Directs construction of galleries (1526).
Robert Duchesne - Benefactor Finance the South Gallery (1651).
Pierre Daust - Architect Designed the chapel Saint-Michel (1658).
Jean-Baptiste de La Salle - Founder of the Brothers of Christian Schools School installed in 1705.
Fernand Guey - Conservative Supervises the installation of the museum (1938).
Richard Duplat - Chief Architect Directs the renovation (2018-2022).

Origin and history

The aître Saint-Maclou, located in Rouen, is an ancient 14th century ossuary, enlarged in the 16th century to meet the needs created by plague outbreaks. Its name comes from the term aitre (cimetery in old French) and the nearby parish of Saint-Maclou. The site, originally a cemetery created after the black plague of 1348, was mentioned as early as 1362. Faced with a new epidemic in the 16th century, the parish decided to set up galleries to store the exhumed bones, thus freeing up space. The works began in 1526 under the direction of Guillaume Rybert, with the construction of the galleries west, north and east, completed between 1529 and 1533. The sculptures of the columns, inspired by the Renaissance, combine biblical scenes with macabre motifs.

In 1562, the statuettes of the columns were damaged during the Wars of Religion. The south gallery, added only in 1651 thanks to a legacy of Father Robert Duchesne, houses a school for poor boys. The Saint-Michel Chapel was erected in 1658, and schools for boys (1661) and girls (1678) settled there. In 1705, the bones of the attic were removed, and the galleries were raised between 1745 and 1749 to create a floor. The cemetery, closed in 1781 after a royal ordinance, became a spinning workshop in 1768, then a weapons factory under the Terror (1793).

In the 19th century, the site had several assignments: Norman Art Museum (1938), Fine Arts School (from 1940), and boarding school for girls in 1911. Ranked as a historic monument in 1862, it was restored between 1999 and 2002, and then underwent major renovation from 2018, for a cost of 14 million euros, supported by the Normandy Region and the State. The archaeological excavations of 2016-17 reveal numerous skeletons, testimonies of his funeral past.

Architecturally, it forms a quadrilateral of 32 meters wide by 48 long, with three wooden galleries on stone base (XVI century) and a more sober south gallery (XVII century). The carved decorations, typical of the first Renaissance, represent macabre dances, biblical scenes (such as Adam and Eve) and floral motifs. Sandpipes and potholes feature macabre symbols (sterns, tibias) and fossil tools. The open West Gallery still links Martainville Street to Géricault Street.

The Saint-Maclou building illustrates the evolution of medieval funeral practices, marked by epidemics and space needs. Its history also reflects the urban changes in Rouen, moving from a sacred place to an educational, industrial and then cultural space. Today, there remains a unique testimony of the European ossuary, where art, history and collective memory combine.

External links