Crédit photo : Christian Pinatel de Salvator - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1645
Presumed establishment of the convent
Presumed establishment of the convent 1645 (≈ 1645)
Unofficial foundation by the Capuchins.
1656
Official Convent Foundation
Official Convent Foundation 1656 (≈ 1656)
Beginning of the monastic life attested.
1797
Departure of monks
Departure of monks 1797 (≈ 1797)
Sale of the convent after the Revolution.
1803
Purchase by the municipality
Purchase by the municipality 1803 (≈ 1803)
Partial storage by a capuchin.
1908
Transformation into a castle
Transformation into a castle 1908 (≈ 1908)
Purchase by an individual, renovations.
1991
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 1991 (≈ 1991)
Protection of facades and interior decorations.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church of Notre-Dame-des-Anges; façades (including enclosures), roofing, pavement and marble staircase, living rooms and vestibule (including stairways) of the house (see Box A 421): by order of 8 March 1991
Key figures
Pères capucins - Religious and teachers
Occupants of the convent (1656-1797).
Propriétaire privé (1908) - Acquirer and renovator
Turned the convent into a castle.
Origin and history
The Convent of Capuchins of San-Martino-di-Lota, officially founded in 1656 after an alleged creation in 1645, was a place of preaching and teaching for the children of the region. The monks lived there until 1797, when the convent was put on sale. Acquired by the commune in 1803, he remained partially occupied by a Capuchin father until his privatization in 1908, where he was transformed into a castle.
The architecture preserves the U-shaped plan of the original Conventual buildings, with a main body and two wings surrounding a square courtyard, ancient cloistered space. The church Our Lady of Angels closes the courtyard to the north. Inside, the castle has woodwork, marble columns, a carved fireplace and mosaics in the living rooms and the vestibule, testimonies of its aristocratic metamorphosis.
Ranked a Historic Monument in 1991, the site protects, among other things, facades (cloister included), roofs, pavements and marble staircases, as well as living rooms and their decor. These elements illustrate the transition between a monastic place of life and a private residence, marking the religious and architectural history of Upper Corsica.
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