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Funeral chapel of the Thuin family à Angers en Maine-et-Loire

Maine-et-Loire

Funeral chapel of the Thuin family

    67 Rue la Bruyère
    49100 Angers
Crédit photo : Sémhur - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1820
Construction of the chapel
1er quart XIXe siècle
Construction period
8 avril 1992
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Funeral chapel of the Thouin family, including the funeral vault, altar and funeral steles attached to the wall (Box HN 220): inscription by order of 8 April 1992

Key figures

Famille Thouin - Sponsors and owners Have the chapel built.

Origin and history

The funeral chapel of the Thuin family is a neoclassical tomb built in the early 19th century in Angers, Maine-et-Loire department. She joined the romantic current then in vogue in France. The monument is distinguished by its sober architecture and its funerary elements, including a vault, an altar and murals. These features are a representative example of the private chapels of the time, designed to honour the deceased of a family line.

The chapel is located in the park of the former Saint-Nicolas Abbey, on the right bank of Maine, near the pond of the same name. This wooded and historic setting, which is now part of the Garenne Park, reinforces its intimate and monumental character. The building, erected in 1820 by and for the Thuin family, bears witness to the importance of family burials in the Angelian bourgeoisie of the early 19th century, a period marked by a revival of interest in funeral and memorial traditions.

Classified as historical monuments by order of 8 April 1992, the chapel specifically protects its funeral vault, its altar and the steles attached to the walls. This inscription underscores its heritage value, both architectural and historical, in the angeline landscape. The monument also illustrates the evolution of post-revolutionary funeral practices, where wealthy families sought to perpetuate their memory in dedicated spaces, often inspired by antiquity or neoclassicism.

Available sources, including Wikipedia and the Merimée base, specify that the chapel is located at 69 rue de la Bruyère, in an area whose exact location is estimated to be "passable" (level 5 out of 10). This geolocalized detail allows to situate the monument in a neighborhood today urban, but formerly linked to the enclosure of Saint-Nicolas Abbey, a major religious site of Angers since the Middle Ages.

External links