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Couvent des Clarisses de Roubaix dans le Nord

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent
Nord

Couvent des Clarisses de Roubaix

    Allée des Clarisses
    59100 Roubaix
Couvent des Clarisses de Roubaix
Couvent des Clarisses de Roubaix
Couvent des Clarisses de Roubaix
Couvent des Clarisses de Roubaix
Couvent des Clarisses de Roubaix
Crédit photo : Claudine Lebovic - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1857
Wish of Henri Desclée
1874–1876
Construction of the convent
juin 1876
Arrival of the clarisses
octobre 1877
Opening of St. Clair School
1903
Expulsion by anticlerical laws
1923
Back of the Keys
1935
Foundation at Tonkin
2008
Final departure of the clarisses
2010
Registration for Historic Monuments
2019
Project *Zero Seasons*
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The convent and the school, in full, with their fence walls (Cd. KY 116, 117): inscription by decree of 30 December 2010

Key figures

Henri Desclée - Industrial and patronial Founded the convent after a vow in 1857.
Jean-Baptiste Béthune - Belgian architect Designed the convent and church of St Joseph.
Jules Masurel - Romanian industrial The convent was bought in 1906.
Guillaume Delbar - Mayor of Roubaix (2016) Launched the circular economy project.

Origin and history

The convent of the Clarisses of Roubaix was founded on the initiative of industrialist Henri Desclée (1802–73), pioneer of lighting gas, after a vow made in 1857 to thank for avoiding an accident in his factory. The project, financed mainly by his daughter and shareholders, was entrusted to architect Jean-Baptiste Béthune, the future designer of the Saint Joseph church. Built between 1874 and 1876, the Sainte-Claire school — intended for girls in the neighbourhood of the Epeule, then without a school establishment — opened its doors in October 1877 under the direction of three external sisters, while six cloistered clarisses settled in the convent as early as June 1876, coming from Tournai.

The community experienced tensions with anti-clerical laws: a first threat of expulsion in 1880 was avoided thanks to local protests, but the nuns were definitively expelled in 1903 by Waldeck-Rousseau laws. They took refuge in Belgium, while the state confiscated the premises. Repurchased in 1906 by industrialist Jules Masurel, the convent became a technical school, and the Clares could return in 1923. Their community believed up to 87 sisters in the interwar period, with a foundation at Tonkin in 1935, before a gradual decline leading to their final departure in May 2008.

The ensemble, registered with the Historical Monuments since 2010, was acquired by the city of Roubaix in 2009. After a call for projects in 2019, the Zerm collective and the Yes We Camp association developed Zero Seasons, a laboratory of applied ecology and heritage rehabilitation. The chapel now hosts conferences and workshops. The neo-Gothic brick architecture, with its cloister centered on a statue of St. Francis, its adjoining school and its varnished brick decorations, bears witness to Belgian influence and the Romanian industrial history.

The clarisses were a lasting sign of local life: their school, attended by up to 400 students in 1901, became a symbol of Christian unionism. Their heritage continues through the contemporary reinvention of the site, mixing religious memory, architectural heritage and ecological innovation.

External links