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Convent of the Cordeliers of Dinan en Côtes-d'Armor

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent
Côtes-dArmor

Convent of the Cordeliers of Dinan

    1 place des Cordeliers
    22100 Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Couvent des Cordeliers de Dinan
Crédit photo : GO69 - 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
1247-1249
Foundation by Franciscans
1251
Construction of the convent
XIVe siècle
Corporate philanthropy of Charles de Blois
1791
Revolutionary closure
1807
Repurchase by Abbé Berthier
1930
Portal classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Portal: by order of 29 December 1930

Key figures

Henri d'Avaugour - Lord of Dinan Founder of the convent, was buried there.
Alain II d'Avaugour - Son of Henry d'Avaugour Continues the construction of the convent.
Charles de Blois - Duke of Brittany Patron of the convent in the 14th century.
Abbé Berthier - Founder of the college (1804) Rachet the convent after the Revolution.
François-René de Chateaubriand - Writer and politician Former college student.
Robert Surcouf - Corsair and shipowner Former student of the Cordeliers.

Origin and history

The Convent of the Cordeliers of Dinan was founded between 1247 and 1249 by the Franciscans, also called Cordeliers, on the initiative of Henry d'Avaugour, Lord of Dinan. The latter, returning from the Holy Land, built the convent on the ruins of a family castle, in fulfilment of a vow. He took the monastic habit there in 1278 and was buried there. His son, Alain II d'Avaugour, continued the work, allowing the convent to welcome up to thirty religious in the 15th and 16th centuries.

In 1251 the convent was placed under the patronage of Notre-Dame des Vertus. In the 14th century, Charles de Blois, Duke of Brittany, financially supported his development by adding rooms, cloisters, and by offering works of art, including a miraculous painting by Saint Francis of Assisi. This painting, struck by a knight by order of John IV, is said to have bled, an event commemorated today by a stained glass window in the school chapel.

Prosperous until the 18th century, the convent declined to the Revolution, with only seven monks in 1791. Closed and then sold as a national good, it was bought in 1807 by Abbé Berthier, who restored an ecclesiastical college. Since 1804, the site has been home to a private Catholic school, marked by major renovations in the 19th and 20th centuries, including the construction of the chapel in 1904 and the buildings of Saint Joseph (1956) and Notre-Dame (1961).

His illustrious students include such personalities as François-René de Chateaubriand, privateer Robert Surcouf, or Bishop Eugène Le Fer de La Motte. The convent gate, an architectural masterpiece decorated with ropes and statue niches, was classified as a historic monument in 1930. Today, the Collège-lycée des Cordeliers perpetuates this history by integrating heritage elements, such as the miracle window or preserved liturgical silverware.

The convent illustrates the influence of Franciscans in medieval Brittany, mixing spirituality, seigneurial power and ducal patronage. Its evolution into a school in the 19th century reflects the religious and educational transformations of post-revolutionary France, while preserving a remarkable architectural and artistic heritage.

External links