Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Convent of Dominicans of Guebwiller dans le Haut-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent
Haut-Rhin

Convent of Dominicans of Guebwiller

    Rue des Dominicains
    68500 Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Couvent des Dominicains de Guebwiller
Crédit photo : Thomas Bresson - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1294
Foundation of the convent
1306-1322
Construction of church
1461
Reform of the convent
1789
Dissolution to the Revolution
1920
Church ranking
1990
Acquisition by the department
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church of Dominicans (former): Order of 12 August 1920; Convent of Dominicans (former) (cad. 5 64): by order of 2 January 1976

Key figures

Bertold de Falkenstein - Abbé de Murbach Support for the installation of Dominicans in 1294.
Pierre Stoer - Prior of the convent In function between 1461 and 1466.
Jean-Jacques Bourcart - Industrial and patronial Offer the convent to the city in 1836.
Burcart d’Illzach - Prior of the convent Arms present in the choir (1322).

Origin and history

The Dominican Convent of Guebwiller, located in the Upper Rhine, was founded in 1294 when the Dominicans acquired the city's customs house and outbuildings. Supported by Father Bertold of Falkenstein, the monks settled there on Palm Sunday 1294. Construction of the church nave began in 1306, followed by the choir, completed in 1322. The convent buildings, probably completed around 1339, were profoundly altered after the reform of the convent in 1461, although the church retained its original appearance.

Over the centuries, the convent suffered looting and fire, especially during the wars of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, but the community survived until the French Revolution. After 1789, the places were diverted from their religious use: the church served as a stable in 1814, then as a deposit for a dyeing plant in 1826. In 1836, industrialist Jean-Jacques Bourcart offered the site to the city, which transformed the nave into a market hall and the choir into a cultural space. Ranked a historic monument in 1920, the church became a concert hall in 1962.

The convent experienced several restoration campaigns, notably between 1926 and 1972, revealing murals from the 15th and 18th centuries. In 1990, the Haut-Rhin department acquired the site for a symbolic euro and set up a cultural centre there. Since 2013, the Dominican convent has been a Cultural Centre of Encounter (CCR) focused on music, digital arts and botanical arts, while preserving its Gothic and Baroque architectural heritage.

The church, of sober style conforming to the Dominican ideal of poverty, is distinguished by its vaulted 14th century choir and nave decorated with 15th and 16th century murals, including a Saint Wolfgang dated 1498. The jube, decorated with symbolic sculptures (pelican, phoenix), illustrates the influence of Thomist theology. The convent buildings, organized around a square cloister, housed refectories, kitchen and capitular hall, partially transformed in the 19th and 20th centuries.

The excavations carried out in 1990 allowed to rediscover architectural and pictorial elements, while the successive restorations (including that of 1711) revealed a baroque decor superimposed on medieval structures. Today, the site combines heritage conservation and cultural innovation, welcoming concerts, exhibitions and artist residences in an exceptional historical setting.

External links