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Ossuary à Faulquemont en Moselle

Crédit photo : Aimelaime - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
4e quart XVIIe siècle
Construction of the ossuary
25 novembre 1987
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Ossuary (former) (cad. 32 3): registration by order of 25 November 1987

Origin and history

The Mussuary of Faulquemont is a historical monument in the municipality of the same name, Moselle (Great East Region). Built in the 4th quarter of the 17th century, it is an old building dedicated to the conservation of bones, a common practice in urban or religious areas to free space in cemeteries. Its architecture and function reflect the health and religious concerns of the time, where burial management was a major challenge for communities.

Ranked among the Historical Monuments since a decree of 25 November 1987, the ossuary is now the property of the commune of Faulquemont. Although its state of conservation and accessibility are not specified, its listing as protected monuments underscores its heritage importance. The approximate location, indicated as 18 Bis Rue Saint-Vincent, suggests integration into the city's historic urban fabric. Available sources, including the Monumentum database and Merimée data, confirm its status but do not provide details of its current use (visit, restoration, etc.).

The Lorraine region, now integrated into the East, was in modern times marked by strong religious influence and strict funeral traditions. Ossuaries, often associated with churches or cemeteries, played both a practical (decongestion of burial sites) and a symbolic (recall of mortality and faith). Faulquemont, like many cities of the Moselle, was then under the ecclesiastical or seigneurial authority, with an economy mainly agricultural and artisanal. This type of monument thus illustrates the community life and beliefs of the time, while constituting a tangible vestige of this past.

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