Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Chapel of Saint-Tropez dans le Var

Var

Chapel of Saint-Tropez

    10 Le Couvent
    83990 Saint-Tropez

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
28 octobre 1554
Collective construction decision
fin XVe - début XVIe siècle
First official entry
1764
Current reconstruction
4 mars 1954
Registration Historic Monuments
1992
Purchase by the city
2010-2014
Complete restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle de Saint-Tropez (Box B 505p): inscription by order of 4 March 1954

Key figures

Saint Tropez - Holy patron saint of the city Legend binds the chapel to its burial.
Capucins - Religious Order (17th century) Cover adjacent to the Revolution.
Ursulines - Owner Congregation (post-Revolution) The chapel was sold in 1992.

Origin and history

The chapel of Saint-Tropez-des-Platanes, also known as the chapel of the convent, was built in the 16th century in Saint-Tropez, in the Var. Its first official mention appears in the cadastre of the late 15th or early 16th century. In 1554, the Community Council ordered its collective construction, under penalty of a fine for the recalcitrants. Originally located outside the walls, it was rebuilt several times, taking its present form in 1764, as indicated by the date engraved above its door.

The archaeological excavations carried out by the Archaeological Center of Var in 1995 revealed that the site once housed a Roman villa and an ancient cemetery. In the 17th century, a convent of capuchins settled against the chapel, later replaced by the Ursulines after the Revolution. The convent then became the retirement home Les Platanes, while the chapel, bought by the city in 1992, was completely restored between 2010 and 2014.

The chapel contains a collection of marine ex-votos and a bust of St Tropez, reproduced identically from the original during the works. It has been listed in the Historical Monuments since 1954 and remains a central place of local devotion, especially during the Bravade, an annual procession. According to legend, it would mark the location of the burial of the patron saint of the city.

Among its remarkable elements are a altarpiece, a cross path, statues (including that of Saint Tropez placed in a rediscovered niche), and restored painted decorations. The terracotta floor and the wooden stand were also redone. The chapel thus illustrates centuries of religious and architectural history, from ancient origins to modern transformations.

External links