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Convent Saint-François de Bonifacio en Corse-du-sud

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent
Corse-du-sud

Convent Saint-François de Bonifacio

    1 Avenue de la Carotola
    20169 Bonifacio
Couvent Saint-François de Bonifacio
Couvent Saint-François de Bonifacio
Couvent Saint-François de Bonifacio
Couvent Saint-François de Bonifacio
Crédit photo : Auteur inconnu - 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
1215
Escale of St Francis of Assisi
1290
Construction of the convent
1457
Death of Ranuccio Spinola
fin XIVe siècle
Construction of church
1616
White marble beanie
1976
Historical monument classification
2019
Restoration and funeral
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Remainings of the conventual buildings (Box AB 8): entry by order of 31 December 1976; Church (cad. AB 8): Order of 31 December 1976

Key figures

Saint François d'Assise - Founder of the Franciscan Order Escale to Bonifacio in 1215
Ranuccio Spinola - Bishop of Ajaccio and Franciscan Entered the church in 1457
Francesco Geronimo Aldovrandi - Artisan Franciscan marbrier Suspected author of the chimney (1752)

Origin and history

The Saint Francis convent (San Franzé) is a former Franciscan convent founded in the 13th century in the upper town of Bonifacio, Corsica. Located near the sea cemetery, it faces a military esplanade with views of Sardinia. According to tradition, St Francis of Assisi stopped there in 1215 on a trip between Spain and Italy. The convent, built in 1290 by a master mason of Pistoia, was rebuilt in the 14th century and enlarged in the 17th century after a period of abandonment between 1560 and 1646.

The Conventual Church, erected at the end of the 14th century, has a unique nave and two vaulted bays. Ranked a historic monument in 1976, it houses the marble funerary slab of Ranuccio Spinola (bishop of Ajaccio and Franciscan, died in 1457) as well as a white marble bentier dated 1616. The convent, partially in ruins in the 19th century, was restored between 1978 and 1982, then in 2019. Today, he hosts a music school.

A small settlement dedicated to St.Antoine Hermite would have preceded the Franciscan convent. Among the remarkable elements, a 1752 marble fireplace with Franciscan coat of arms and the Aldovrandi family was moved to the town hall. The site also served for Marie-José Nat's funeral in 2019.

The convent illustrates the influence of begging orders in the Mediterranean and the links between Genoese Corsica, Italy and the Iberian peninsula. Its architecture combines Franciscan simplicity and local adaptations, reflecting the cultural exchanges of the time. The employers' festival, celebrated on October 4, continues its anchoring in Bonifacian religious life.

External links