Foundation of the Mirepois Sisters 1675 (≈ 1675)
Creation in Cahors of the congregation.
fin XVIe - début XVIIe siècle
Construction of Renaissance Courtyard
Construction of Renaissance Courtyard fin XVIe - début XVIIe siècle (≈ 1725)
North and west sides preserved today.
1744
Installation of the Mirepois Sisters
Installation of the Mirepois Sisters 1744 (≈ 1744)
Transformation of the convent in Martel.
29 juin 1931
First entry MH
First entry MH 29 juin 1931 (≈ 1931)
Protection of the ancient cloister.
17 septembre 2024
Extension of the MH inscription
Extension of the MH inscription 17 septembre 2024 (≈ 2024)
Façades, galleries and lounge included.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Cloister of the Mirepoises (former): inscription by order of 29 June 1931; The facades and roofs, plus all the galleries and the inner courtyard, the monumental staircase, the ground floor living room with its coffered ceiling and the plate plot (ground and basement, plot BC 406) of the former convent or school of the Congregation of the Christian Schools and Charity known as the Mirepois, appearing in the cadastre section BC, parcel 406 as delimited in red as the plan annexed to the decree: inscription by decree of 17 September 2024
Key figures
Sœurs Mirepoises - Religious Congregation
Occupied and transformed the convent.
Joseph Daymard - Local historian
Studyed the congregations of the Lot.
Colette Chantraine - Author and historian
Documented the Quercy heritage.
Origin and history
The Mirepois cloister, located in Martel in the Lot, is a historical monument listed since 1931. It preserves medieval remains embedded in a house adjacent to a Renaissance-style courtyard dating from the late 16th or early 17th century. Only the north and west sides of this courtyard remain, while the south side was redesigned in the 17th century with an arcade gallery and a monumental staircase. The Mirepois Sisters, founded in 1675 in Cahors, occupied the site from 1744, transforming the southern house body and adding a triangular pediment.
Originally, the convent consisted of several medieval buildings, including a 14th-century residence restructured in the 16th century with galleries on courtyard. In the 17th century, major works added cross-sections, a straight flight staircase, and a neo-Renaissance ceiling in the 20th century. The site, used as a college before 1746, became a school in the 19th and 20th centuries under the Grey Sisters. The park retains traces of the old rampart and the Sers Gate.
The cloister was partially inscribed in 1931, then a protective extension included in 2024 the facades, roofs, galleries, inner courtyard, monumental staircase, and a living room decorated with caissons. Medieval vestiges, visible on elevations (doors, windows with broken lintels, chains of angle), testify to successive transformations. The site, vacant in 1977, was waiting for a restoration to enhance this heritage combining religious, educational and architectural history.
Historical sources refer to local studies, such as those of Joseph Daymard (1906) on the women's congregations of the Lot, or Colette Chantraine (1995) on the Quercy heritage. The cloister thus illustrates the evolution of a monastic place of life in school, reflecting the social and urban changes of Martel since the Middle Ages.