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Former Jesuit college, then prison à Ensisheim dans le Haut-Rhin

Former Jesuit college, then prison

    1 Rue du Moulin
    68190 Ensisheim
State ownership
Ancien collège des Jésuites, puis établissement pénitentiaire
Ancien collège des Jésuites, puis établissement pénitentiaire
Ancien collège des Jésuites, puis établissement pénitentiaire
Crédit photo : Ralph Hammann - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1583
School Foundation
1614
Supported by the Jesuits
1690
Construction of church
1764
Closure of college
1811
Transformation into prison
1938
Welcome of the bagards
1987
Registration historical monument
1988
Mutiny and fire
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

All facades and roofs on streets and courtyards of the main building including the administrative building and the old church (current Protestant chapel). Pillars kept inside the former church, former cellar in basement under the sports field (Box 6 1): inscription by order of 16 July 1987

Key figures

Jean Rasser - Curé of Ensisheim Founded the school in 1583.
Léopold V d'Autriche - Archiduc Supports the creation of the college.
Louis-Ambroise Dubut - Architect Reshuffle the prison in 1811.
Éric-Emmanuel Schmitt - Writer Located a new one in the prison.

Origin and history

The monument was originally founded in 1614 as a Jesuit college in Ensisheim, taking over a school created in 1583 by the parish priest Jean Rasser. This college, with five classes, a boarding school and a chapel, was designed to strengthen Catholic teaching in the face of Lutheran influence in Alsace. The Jesuits of Freiburg-en-Brisgau took the direction at the request of the Archduke Léopold, and the works began in 1628, with a church built around 1690 from stones of the Schwartzenthann convent.

In 1764, after the expulsion of the Jesuits, the college was transformed into a begging depot and then into a military hospital between 1793 and 1800. An imperial decree of 1811 converted him into a central house for prisoners, with major changes led by architect Louis-Ambroise Dubut. The establishment gradually expanded, notably with the construction of a cell block in 1886 and a gate completed in 1906.

In the 20th century, the prison was bombed in 1945-46, followed by a mutiny and fire in 1988, resulting in partial reconstruction. In 1938, she received convicts of forced labour after the abolition of colonial bagnes. Together, including the former church partially preserved as a Protestant chapel, was listed as a historical monument in 1987. Today, the central house has 205 places and accommodates inmates serving long sentences.

The site is also linked to contemporary literature: the new La Vengeance du pardon (2017) by Éric-Emmanuel Schmitt takes place in part, inspired by the prison world and meetings between prisoners and victims. Architecture combines elements of the seventeenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries, reflecting its successive uses.

External links