Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Chapel of the Ursulines of Quintin en Côtes-d'Armor

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapelle

Chapel of the Ursulines of Quintin

    Bourg
    22800 Quintin
Private property
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Chapelle des Ursulines de Quintin
Crédit photo : GO69 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1707
Foundation of the convent
1711
Construction starts
23 mars 1730
Laying the first stone
1736
Church completion
1789-1799
Residence under supervision
1904
Closure of the convent
10 août 1919
Céline's wedding
1940
German occupation
14 mai 1986
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle des Ursulines (Box C 434) : inscription by order of 14 May 1986

Key figures

Duc de Lorges - Founder of the convent Initiator of the community in 1707.
Louis-Ferdinand Céline - Writer and doctor Married to Quintin, evoked the chapel.

Origin and history

The chapel of the Ursulines of Quintin was built in 1707 on the land of Bel-Orient, at the initiative of the Duke of Lorges, to welcome a religious community dedicated to the education of girls. The first Ursulines temporarily settled in 1707 before work began in 1711. The choir of the nuns was solemnly laid in 1730, and the outside church was completed in 1736. The building is distinguished by its Juvena, a two-storey dormitory above the nave, illuminated by an oculus and windows.

During the Revolution, the chapel served as a place of residence for opponents, while the nuns were locked up in the castle. After the convent closed in 1904, the buildings became national property: the nave would successively house German tanks in 1940, then a gym. Ranked a historic monument in 1986 to avoid its collapse, the nave was scaffolded until 2022. Today, the convent buildings are home to social housing, and the chapel is attached to the Foundation of Writers' Houses.

The writer Louis-Ferdinand Céline, who sowed the wounded from the Great War to Quintin, married her in 1919. His work, The Church (1933), evokes this place, demonstrating his attachment to the region. The chapel thus illustrates both the religious, educational and literary history of Brittany, while bearing the stigma of the conflicts of the twentieth century.

External links