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Chartreuse de la Verne à Collobrières dans le Var

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Chartreuse
Eglise romane
Var

Chartreuse de la Verne

    La Verne
    83610 Collobrières
State ownership
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Chartreuse de la Verne
Crédit photo : René Dinkel - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1170
Foundation of the monastery
3 octobre 1174
Consecration of the Roman Catholic Church
1416
Pillows by the lords of Bormes
2 novembre 1789
Confiscation of property
1792
Sale as a national good
1er mars 1961
Allocation to Waters and Forests
1983
Back to monastic life
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The ruins of the old Chartreuse (case E 29-35): classification by decree of 22 October 1976

Key figures

Pierre Isnard - Bishop of Toulon Co-founder of the Chartreuse in 1170
Frédol d’Anduze - Bishop of Fréjus Co-founder with Pierre Isnard
Didier - First Prior and Bishop Directed the Verne after its foundation
Jean-Baptiste Giraud - Prior twice Death at the Verne in 1646
Mathias Régis - Prior in the 18th century Also directed the charterer of Aix
Joseph-Claude de Geoffroy - Last prior before 1789 Positioned from 1775 to 1777

Origin and history

The Chartreuse de la Verne, known as Notre-Dame de Clémence Monastery, was founded in 1170 by the bishops Pierre Isnard de Toulon and Frédol d'Anduze de Fréjus. Located in the commune of Collobrières, in the Maures massif, it was the first Cartus settlement in the region, inspired by the Chartreuse de Montrieux. His name could come from the Latin verna (slave), the Provençal verno (aulna), or from a pagan goddess, Laverna. The first Romanesque church, consecrated in 1174, was destroyed by fire and then looted in 1416, but the monastery persisted until the Revolution.

Several fires (1214, 1271, 1318) ravaged the buildings, saving only the church. Rebuilt on several occasions, the Chartreuse enjoyed a spiritual influence marked until its confiscation in 1789 by the Constituent Assembly. In 1790 his goods were inventoried before being sold as national goods in 1792. The current remains, mainly from the 17th and 18th centuries, bear witness to restorations using the Moorish green serpentine, a local stone extracted from the quarries of La Môle.

Ranked a historic monument in 1921, the Chartreuse was restored from the 1960s thanks to the commitment of the Water and Forest Administration and the Friends of the Verne Association. Since 1983, it has been home to a community of nuns of the Monastery Family of Bethlehem, reviving its spiritual vocation. The site, accessible by a managed forest trail, retains remarkable elements such as the cloister, the chapel, or the statue of Notre-Dame de Clémence overlooking the poterne.

The history of the Verne is also that of his priors, some of whom became bishops, such as Didier de Toulon or Stephen, his successor. Others, like Jean-Baptiste Giraud or Mathias Régis, marked the monastery by their multiple mandates in the 17th and 18th centuries. The archives also reveal donations of land by local families, such as the Felgueriis, strengthening its anchor in the territory.

Today, the Chartreuse combines heritage and monastic life. Visitors can discover a witness hermitage, organized according to the Cartusian model, while the bell of the seventeenth century, classified in 1982, is displayed at the town hall of Collobrières. The site, surrounded by a cedral, offers an immersion in Provencal history and spirituality, between medieval memory and contemporary renaissance.

External links