Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Assumption Church or Polish Church à Paris 1er dans Paris 1er

Patrimoine classé
Eglise de style classique

Assumption Church or Polish Church

    263 Rue Saint-Honoré
    75001 Paris 1er Arrondissement
Ownership of the municipality
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption à Paris
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Eglise de lAssomption ou église polonaise
Crédit photo : Gryffindor - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1622
Foundation of the convent
1670-1676
Construction of church
1790
Removal of the convent
1802
Reopening to worship
1844
Attribution to Poles
1907
Historical monument classification
2017-2018
Restoration of the organ
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Assumption Church or Polish Church: Order of 20 December 1907

Key figures

Charles Errard - Architect Designed the church, inspired by Italy.
Michel Poncet de La Rivière - Archbishop of Bourges Blessed the church in 1676.
Denys Affre - Archbishop of Paris Confeded the church to the Poles in 1844.
Charles de La Fosse - Painter Author of Assumption* (Coupole, 1676).
Aristide Cavaillé-Coll - Organ factor Created the organ in the late 19th century.
Frédéric Chopin - Polish musician Attended the church when he arrived in Paris.

Origin and history

The church of Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption, located in Maurice-Barrès Square in the 1st arrondissement of Paris, was built between 1670 and 1676 for the convent of the Ladies of the Assumption, founded in 1622. The architect Charles Errard, inspired by antiquity and the Renaissance, designed a rotunda of 24 meters in diameter topped by a dome. The facade, decorated with six Corinthian columns, recalls that of the Sorbonne. The church was blessed in 1676 by the Archbishop of Bourges, Michel Poncet de La Rivière.

During the Revolution, the convent was abolished in 1790 and transformed into barracks for the Cent-Switzerlands. The church, disacralized, served as a decor store. In 1802, she reopened as a parish church of the Madeleine, before being entrusted in 1844 to the Polish Catholic Mission by Archbishop Denys Affre. It became a central place for the Polish diaspora in Paris, welcoming figures like Adam Mickiewicz or Frédéric Chopin.

Ranked as a historical monument in 1907, the church houses major works, including the Assumption of Charles de La Fosse (1676) adorning the dome, and a Cavaillé-Coll organ of the late 19th century. His court, formerly closed, was built in 1924 to form the current square Maurice-Barrès. The old convent buildings, partially preserved, now house the Court of Auditors.

The church was the scene of significant events, such as the funeral of General Lafayette (1834) or the temporary burial of Talleyrand (1838). Its furniture includes paintings by Joseph-Marie Vien and Carle Van Loo, as well as a Polish restaurant in the crypt. The Polish community, growing in the inter-war period, developed an intense spiritual and cultural life.

The organ, restored several times (notably in 2017-2018 by Bernard Dargassies), illustrates the artistic heritage of the building. Recent work has sought to preserve its mechanics and its harmony, while fighting against the deterioration of the interior renovations of the church. The instrument, electrified in 1970, preserves an 18th century French classic buffet.

External links