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Aubeterre-sur-Dronne Minima Convent en Charente

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent

Aubeterre-sur-Dronne Minima Convent

    5314 Rue Pierre Véry 
    16390 Aubeterre-sur-Dronne
Ownership of a municipal public institution
Couvent des Minimes dAubeterre-sur-Dronne
Couvent des Minimes dAubeterre-sur-Dronne
Couvent des Minimes dAubeterre-sur-Dronne
Couvent des Minimes dAubeterre-sur-Dronne
Couvent des Minimes dAubeterre-sur-Dronne
Crédit photo : JLPC - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
15 août 1617
Laying the first stone
1626
Installation of minima
1742
Transfer from hospital
1960
Conversion into hospice
29 août 1991
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Candidature of Minimes (cad. AB 433, 192): registration by order of 29 August 1991

Key figures

Hippolyte Bourchard - Founder and local lord Sponsor of the convent in 1617.
François d'Esparbès de Lussan - Co-founder and Marquis Initiator of the educational and funeral project.

Origin and history

The convent of the Minimes d'Aubeterre-sur-Dronne was founded in 1617 by Hippolyte Bourchard and François d'Esparbes de Lussan, local lords, to serve as both a family burial and an educational institution for the Marquisate. The first stone of the chapel, dedicated to Our Lady of the Assumption, was laid on 15 August 1617, marking the beginning of a construction site that saw the religious settle there permanently in 1626. The convent also entered a hospital previously run by the Cordeliers, before ceding it in 1742 to the nuns of Sainte-Marthe. Its spatial organization, in quadrilateral on two levels around a cloister, reflects a classical Conventual architecture, with arches rhythmizing the inner galleries and a chapel enriched with a white stone altarpiece and vaults on dogive cross-sections.

Since the French Revolution, the convent has had various uses, reflecting the changes of society: free school, gendarmerie, town hall, and hospice from 1960. Successive transformations have partially altered the north and east elevations as well as the overall structure, but some original elements remain, such as a breech, 18th-century bays and a 17th-century portal to the east and south facades. The ground floor preserves vaulted rooms, while the chapel, initially flanked by lateral chapels to the west, still bears witness to its fascination with its carved decorations. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1991, the site remains owned by a communal public establishment, although its current state and conditions of visit are not specified in the sources.

The history of the convent is part of the broader context of the religious foundations of the Counter-Reform in France, where beggar orders such as the Minimes – resulting from the Franciscan reform – played a key role in the education, care and spiritual supervision of the populations. In Aubeterre-sur-Dronne, a strategic town on the border between Poitou and Angoumois, the convent also participated in the affirmation of the local seigneurial power, as evidenced by the names of its founders, from influential noble families. The transmission of the hospital to the nuns of Sainte-Marthe in 1742 also illustrates the recompositions of the charitable networks in the modern era, often linked to the evolution of religious orders and the health needs of the communities.

External links