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Church of the Jacobins of Toulouse en Haute-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Couvent
Architecture gothique méridionale
Haute-Garonne

Church of the Jacobins of Toulouse

    Parvis des Jacobins
    31000 Toulouse

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1700
1800
1900
2000
1215
Dominican Order Foundation
1230
Construction begins
1275-1292
Construction of palm and choir
1369
Arrival of relics
1791
Expulsion of Dominicans
1974
Return of relics
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Dominique de Guzmán - Founder of the Dominican Order Created the order in Toulouse in 1215.
Pons de Capdenier - Capital and donor The acquisition of the land was completed in 1229.
Bertrand de Montaigu - Abbé de Moissac Celebrated the inaugural Mass in 1292.
Guillaume-Pierre Godin - Cardinal patron Financed the reconstruction of the nave in the 14th.
Maurice Prin - Honorary curator Dedicating 60 years to the restoration of the monument.
Max Ingrand - Glass artist Created contemporary stained glass (1951-1964).

Origin and history

The church of the Jacobins of Toulouse, founded by the Dominican order in the 13th century, is a masterpiece of Languedoc Gothic art. Built in brick, it embodies the ideal of poverty of the preaching Brothers, with a rectangular nave divided to separate religious and lay. Its mineral palm, a network of 22 veins supporting the vaults, is a unique architectural feat completed in 1292.

The convent grew into four campaigns (1230-1336), financed by donations like that of Capdenier's Capitoul Pons. Since 1369, the church has been home to the relics of Saint Thomas of Aquinas, after having been the seat of the University of Toulouse until the Revolution. Its octagonal bell tower (45 m), inspired by Saint-Sernin, and its marble cloister of Saint-Béat (1306-1309) complete this monastic ensemble.

During the Revolution, the convent became barracks and then stables, suffering destruction (partial destruction of the cloister, suppression of the arrow). Restored since 1920, he owes his rescue to Maurice Prin, honorary curator. Today, the church impresses with its 80 m long, contemporary stained glass windows (Max Ingrand, 1955) and its polychrome décor, while the refectory hosts temporary exhibitions.

The chapel Saint-Antonin (1335-1341), adorned with apocalyptic frescoes, and the capitular room (1299-1301) bear witness to the artistic richness of the place. The Baroque mausoleum of St.Thomas Aquinas (17th century), destroyed at the Revolution, left room for a modern altar (1974) sheltering its shawl. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1840, the ensemble combines external austerity and interior sumptuousness.

The history of the Jacobins is marked by various uses: a place of preaching against catharism, a medieval university, a refuge of works of art during the First World War (under the care of Paul Jamot, curator of the Louvre). The successive restorations revived its painted decorations and its partially reconstituted cloister. Today owned by the city, there remains a symbol of the intellectual and spiritual heritage of Toulouse.

External links