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Chapel of the Capuchins of Valencia à Valence dans la Drôme

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapelle baroque et classique
Drôme

Chapel of the Capuchins of Valencia

    4 Place Laënnec
    26000 Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Chapelle des Capucins de Valence
Crédit photo : Morburre - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1620-1630
Construction of the convent
1791
Sale as a national good
1802
Transformation to hospital
fin XVIIIe siècle
Decor painted in trompe-l'oeil
1991
Definitive decommissioning
24 octobre 1997
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Former chapel (cad. AB 522): inscription by order of 24 October 1997

Key figures

Saint Venance - Bishop and patron saint Represented as a statue and altarpiece.
Capucins - Founding religious order Builders of the convent in the 17th century.

Origin and history

The Chapel of the Capuchins of Valencia, located 4 Place Laennec, is a former convent built between 1620 and 1630 by the Capuchins, an order active in the Tridentine reform. Installed on the banks of the Rhone River, it would have been built on a pile of a Roman bridge, which partially protected it from flooding. Its atypical orientation (choir to the west) and its pebbly machine alternating with flat stones reflect local techniques.

At the time of the Revolution, the convent was sold as a national good in 1791, and then transformed into a hospital in the early 19th century, a function it retained until the 1970s. The chapel, restored to worship as a hospital chapel, is decorated at the end of the eighteenth century of trompe-l'oeil (false architectures and perspectives). Disused in 1991 after her assignment to the DDE, she now serves as a meeting room and exhibition room.

The inside, rectangular, presents a 17th century altarpiece dedicated to Saint Venance (local patron saint), murals in grey, and two side chapels. The first, vaulted in cribs, houses a altarpiece with the Virgin adorned with the Lamb on the Book of Seven Seals, a rare theme. The second, dedicated to Saint Benedict, preserves a polychrome statue of Saint Venance, probably added in the 19th century. Eight paintings of capuchin saints, now preserved elsewhere, once adorned the walls.

The sober facade, typical of Capuchin architecture, combines a classic gate in the middle of a hanger surmounted by a broken pediment and a niche housing Saint Venance. The visible exterior walls, especially on the south side, reveal a combination of Rhone pebbles and flat stones. The hypothesis of a common Italian architect with the nearby Abbey of Soyons remains plausible but unconfirmed.

Classified as a historical monument in 1997, the chapel bears witness to the religious and hospital history of Valencia. Its classified furniture (retreadables, paintings) is now scattered between the Departmental Archives and the Conservatoire du Patrimoine. The structure, integrated into buildings of various periods, illustrates the successive reallocations of a religious heritage after secularization.

External links