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Abbey of Clarisses-Urbanists à Montigny-lès-Vesoul en Haute-Saône

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Haute-Saône

Abbey of Clarisses-Urbanists

    3-5 Cour de l'Abbaye
    70000 Montigny-lès-Vesoul
Owned by the department; private property; owned by a private company
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Abbaye de Clarisses-Urbanistes
Crédit photo : Ginette Mathis - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1700
1800
1900
2000
1286
Foundation of the Abbey
1725-1729
Construction of church
1731
Louis XV Regulation
1769
Renovation of the abbey house
1789
32 canonesses present
1997
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Abbaye, including the enclosure and former communes of the Abbatial Quarter (Box AB 310, 311, 98, 329, 328, 327, 83, 85-92, 324, 323, 322, 309, 306, 308, 95, 307, 377, 82, 72, 71, 73, 100): by order of 9 November 1994 - All the remaining canonical houses of the abbey, including their garden where appropriate; abbey church; Abbatial quarter; courtyard, including support walls on the street to the south, and garden below the west entrance (current Parcel No. 100) (Cd. AB 310, 311, 98, 329, 328, 327, 85-92, 324, 323, 322, 309, 306, 308, 95, 307, 377, 100): by order of 25 April 1997

Key figures

Héloïse de Joinville - Founder of the Abbey Sister of Jean de Joinville, Viscountess of Vesoul.
Louis XV - King of France Issued a regulation in 1731 on the nobility.
Jean-François Tripard - Architect Designed the abbey church (1725-1729).
Jean-Charles Colombot - Architect Redesign the abbey house in 1769.
Marie-Charlotte Tricornot du Trembloy - Abbesse Commander of the stairs in 1769.
Jacques François Marca - Sculptor Author of the altarpiece of the church (1737).

Origin and history

The abbey of Montigny-lès-Vesoul, known as the abbey of noble ladies, was founded in 1286 by Héloïse de Joinville, sister of Jean de Joinville and widow of Jean de Faucogney. Originally conceived as a convent of urbanist clarisses, it became a chapter of noble ladies in the 18th century. The nuns, from the aristocracy, live in individual houses around a chapel, with strict rules of nobility and dowry fixed by Louis XV in 1731.

The abbey suffered numerous destructions: ravaged by the Routiers in 1356, the Écorcheurs in 1437, then burned in 1595 and abandoned during the Ten Years War (1636-1648). In 1686, a new fire destroyed the buildings, and for lack of funds, the nuns obtained permission to build private houses in the abbatial enclosures, marking an individualization of their way of life.

Major reconstruction took place in the 18th century in two phases: between 1700 and 1720 (north and west wings), then between 1720 and 1740 (extension of the capitular fence, church, and canonical houses). The church, built by Jean-François Tripard (1725-1729), houses a altarpiece by Jacques François Marca (1737). In 1769, Jean-Charles Colombot remodeled the abbey house, adding a staircase to the arms of the abbesse Marie-Charlotte Tricornot du Trembloy.

In 1789, there were 32 canonesses in 18 houses. Sold as national property during the Revolution, some nuns bought their houses or church. After 1827, the site received successively undressed chames (1844-1864) and Benedictines (1874), before being sold in 1905 after the law of separation of churches and the state.

The current remains include the portal of the Abbey (1556), re-used in the sacristy, and elements of the eighteenth century. The complex is classified as a historical monument in 1994 (registration) and 1997 (classification), covering canonical houses, church, abbatial district and its gardens.

The abbey illustrates the evolution of noble convents in Franche-Comté, moving from a strict religious community to an aristocratic chapter, reflecting tensions between monastic rules and nobiliary privileges under the Old Regime.

External links