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Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen dans le Calvados

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chapelle romane
Calvados

Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen

    Rue du Marais
    14000 Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Chapelle Sainte-Paix de Caen
Crédit photo : Karldupart - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1042–1048
Caen Provincial Council
1061
Construction of the chapel
1562
Devasation by Protestants
1718
Integration in Caen
1958
City acquisition
3 juin 1975
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle Sainte-Paix (cad. AH 150): Order of 3 June 1975

Key figures

Guillaume le Conquérant - Duke of Normandy and King of England Sponsor of the chapel in 1061

Origin and history

The chapel Sainte-Paix, located on Rue du Marais in Caen, was built in the 11th century on the order of William the Conqueror to commemorate a provincial council (1042–1048) having established the Truce of God and curfew. Originally erected on the territory of Mondeville (integrated in Caen in the 18th century), it was located on the right bank of the Orne River and was also named after the church of Toussaints or Saint Mark. This ducal construction site is part of the massive construction dynamics initiated by Guillaume, in the same way as the Abbey of Men, the Abbey of Ladies or the Castle of Caen.

Destroyed several times, the chapel suffered major damage in 1562 by the Protestants, then during the French Revolution. Partly rebuilt in the 17th century, its remains were integrated in 1835 into a gas factory, bombed in 1944. Only the choir remains today, acquired in 1958 by the city of Caen for a symbolic franc. Classified as a historical monument on June 3, 1975, it is only accessible by guided tours. A bas-relief from the site is preserved at the Musée de Normandie.

The chapel should not be confused with other homonymous buildings in Caen: the former parish church of Sainte-Paix (destroyed after serving as a military store), or the church rebuilt in 1802 on the rue d'Auge (it itself destroyed in 1943). In 2020, the chapel served as the setting for the show Secrets d'histoire (France 3) for an episode dedicated to William the Conqueror.

Historical sources underline its role in the Norman medieval religious landscape, marked by the ducal influence. The excavations and studies, such as those carried out by the Department of Archaeology of Calvados (1996), confirm its heritage importance. Today, it is a communal property, illustrating the urban transformations and conflicts that marked Caen, from the medieval period to the bombings of the 20th century.

External links