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Chapelle des Bernardines de Marseille à Marseille 2ème dans les Bouches-du-Rhône

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapelle baroque et classique
Bouches-du-Rhône

Chapelle des Bernardines de Marseille

    3 Montée du Saint-Esprit
    13002 Marseille 2ème
Chapelle des Bernardines de Marseille
Chapelle des Bernardines de Marseille
Chapelle des Bernardines de Marseille

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1637
Foundation of the first convent
1745
Construction of the new convent
20 août 1751
Installation of nuns
1794
Revolutionary closure
9 septembre 1804
Opening of the Museum of Fine Arts
31 juillet 1952
Historical monument classification
1987
Reconversion to theatre
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Roi René - Former owner of the estate Acheta the "king's garden" in 1459.
Charles Ier de Lorraine - Duke of Guise Governor of Provence, owner of the estate.
Pierre-Paul Bruand - Architect First master of the convent.
Balthazar Dreveton - Marseille architect Author of the final plans.
Jean-Michel Verdiguier - Sculptor Decorate the church and create interior elements.
Fossati - Marbling Created the altar in 1755.
Claude-François Achard - Member of the Arts Commission Participates in the revolutionary inventory of works.

Origin and history

The chapel of Bernardines originated in 1637, when the Reformed Cistercian Bernardines nuns founded a first convent in Marseilles on the domain of the "king's garden", acquired in 1459 by King René. This site, located near the Old Port, is expropriated for the construction of the arsenal of galeries, forcing the nuns to build a new convent in 1745 near the door of Noailles. The plans are entrusted to the architects Pierre-Paul Bruand and then Balthazar Dreveton, with a decoration carved by Jean-Michel Verdiguier. The altar, made by the marbrier Fossati in 1755, is now preserved in the church of Saint Cannat.

During the Revolution, the convent was closed and transformed into an administrative seat, while the church became a museum of fine arts in 1804, housing works by Coypel, Mignard, Puget or Dandré-Bardon. Despite its inadaptation (dark and poorly lit premises), the museum remained there until 1869, when it was transferred to the Longchamp Palace. The church was then returned to worship as a chapel of Thiers High School, before being decommissioned in 1937 and converted into an exhibition hall, then into a trial theatre in 1987.

Ranked a historic monument on July 31, 1952, the chapel of Bernardines embodies the cultural changes of Marseilles, from place of worship to artistic space. Its 18th-century architecture, marked by the works of Dreveton and Verdiguier, bears witness to Provencal religious heritage, while its successive uses reflect the political and social upheavals, from the Revolution to the present day.

External links