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Convent of Dinan Ursulines en Côtes-d'Armor

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent
Côtes-dArmor

Convent of Dinan Ursulines

    19 Rue de la boulangerie
    22100 Dinan
Couvent des Ursulines de Dinan
Couvent des Ursulines de Dinan
Couvent des Ursulines de Dinan
Couvent des Ursulines de Dinan
Couvent des Ursulines de Dinan
Couvent des Ursulines de Dinan
Couvent des Ursulines de Dinan
Couvent des Ursulines de Dinan
Couvent des Ursulines de Dinan
Crédit photo : Pymouss - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1615
Episcopal authorization
1618
Installation of Ursulines
1620
Laying the first stone
1638
Construction of the chapel
1792
Expulsion of Ursulines
1798
Sale as a national good
1802
Manufacturing
1862
Bankruptcy and fragmentation
1987
Classification of the chapel
1990
Rehabilitation of housing
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapel (AK 316): inscription by order of 7 July 1987

Key figures

Guillaume LeGouverneur - Bishop of Saint Malo Authorizes installation of Ursulines in 1615.
Poussin - Owner Designs the chapel and convent.
M. Toussaint-Dutertre - Buyer of national goods Turns the convent into a factory in 1802.
Louis Arretche - Architect Designed the residence Saint-Charles (1965).

Origin and history

The convent of the Ursulines of Dinan, founded in the early seventeenth century, initially settled in 1618 in a house close to the chapel Saint-Nicolas, before its first stone was laid in 1620 by the bishop of Saint-Malo, Guillaume LeGuverneur. The building, organized in quadrilateral with three wings and a cloister, includes a chapel built in 1638 by the master of work Poussin, also responsible for the Dominican convent of Dinan. The site also houses a boarding school for poor girls and gardens extending to the ramparts.

In 1792, the 34 nuns were expelled during the Revolution, and the convent, sold as a national property in 1798, became a sailing canvas factory in 1802. The workshops occupy the wings of the convent, while the chapel serves as offices. The factory, equipped with a steam machine, closed in 1862. The buildings were then fragmented and partially destroyed, notably during the drilling of Rue Saint-Charles in 1862, dividing the former cloister.

In the 20th century, the remaining buildings (chapel, south wing and part of the west wing) were preserved. The north wing was replaced by the residence of Saint Charles in the 1960s, while the remains of the convent were rehabilitated in 1990 as the residence of the Ursulines. The chapel, isolated from the rest by the eastern wall of the cloister, remains the only element classified as a historical monument since 1987.

External links