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Abbaye Sainte-Claire d'Arras dans le Pas-de-Calais

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye

Abbaye Sainte-Claire d'Arras

    1 Rue Sainte-Claire
    62000 Arras
Ownership of a private company
Abbaye Sainte-Claire dArras
Abbaye Sainte-Claire dArras
Abbaye Sainte-Claire dArras
Abbaye Sainte-Claire dArras
Crédit photo : Maxence Jeanjean - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1457
Foundation of the Abbey
1735
Notre-Dame-des-Anges Chapel
19 novembre 1946
Registration of the portal
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The entrance building of the former refuge on the square: inscription by decree of 15 January 1929 - All the buildings of the former refuge surrounding the second court of the Wetz-d'Amain: inscription by order of 13 August 1946

Key figures

Philippe de Saveuse - Founder Co-founder with his wife in 1457
Marie de Lully - Founder Wife of Philippe de Saveuse
Catherine de Callone - First abbess Directed the Abbey after its foundation
Pape Calixte III - Religious Authority The foundation was approved in 1457

Origin and history

Sainte-Claire Abbey, also known as the Clarisses convent, is a religious building located at 1 rue Sainte-Claire in Arras. Founded in 1457 by Philip de Saveuse and his wife Marie de Lully, this abbey was approved by Pope Calixte III. Catherine de Callone became her first abbess. The site, occupied since the 15th century, still houses a community of Claresse sisters, and its chapel, accessible to the public during the services, preserves the tombs of the founders and the family of Gomiécourt.

The 18th-century gate, said to the "eye of God", was the entrance to the old chapel. It has been a historic monument since 1946 and bears witness to the religious architecture of the time. The abbey garden also houses a small chapel dedicated to Notre-Dame-des-Anges, erected in 1735. Although privately owned, the abbey remains a place of worship and historical memory for the city of Arras.

The Clares, a women's religious order derived from the rule of Saint Claire of Assisi, marked local history by their uninterrupted presence since the foundation. Their convent, typical of the late Middle Ages urban monastic settlements, illustrates both the piety of the Arrange elites and the importance of begging orders in the cities of northern France. The maintenance of monastic life on this site makes it a rare testimony of spiritual and architectural continuity.

External links