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Chapel of Concise à Thonon-les-Bains en Haute-Savoie

Chapel of Concise

    19 Place de la Fontaine
    74200 Thonon-les-Bains
Ownership of the municipality
Crédit photo : Pymouss44 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
2000
1250
First written entry
Début XVe siècle
Church expansion
1536
Damage under Bernese occupation
1621
Restoration by Saint Francis de Sales
1630
Change of word
2015
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The chapel of Concise, located 19B, Place de la Fontaine, in full (Box V 148): inscription by order of 22 October 2015

Key figures

Innocent IV - Pope Cite the parish in 1250.
Saint François de Sales - Bishop of Annecy Order restoration in 1621.

Origin and history

The chapel of Concise, originally a parish church, was first mentioned in 1250 in a bubble of Pope Innocent IV. This document attests to its existence as early as the thirteenth century, marking its early anchoring in the religious landscape of the region. At that time, the building served as a place of worship for the local community, in a context where parishes structured the social and spiritual life of Chablais, then under Savoyard influence.

At the beginning of the 15th century, the church was enlarged with the addition of a span and the construction of a chapel dedicated to Saint Michael. These changes reflect a period of demographic development or local prosperity, typical of the 14th–15th century where religious buildings were often extended to accommodate more faithful. However, in 1536, during the Bernese occupation, the building was severely damaged, to the point that the cult was interrupted until 1598, the date of the restoration of Catholicism in the region.

The chapel owes its survival and transformation to Saint Francis de Sales, who ordered its repair and expansion in 1621 as part of the Catholic reconquest of Chablais. On this occasion, the original term of Saint John the Baptist was replaced in 1630 by that of Saint Sebastian, probably in response to an epidemic of plague, a common practice to invoke divine protection. Once again a simple chapel in the 19th century, it loses its parish status but retains its heritage role, as evidenced by its inscription in the Historical Monuments in 2015

External links