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Former Chartreuse Notre-Dame-du-Puy à Brives-Charensac en Haute-Loire

Haute-Loire

Former Chartreuse Notre-Dame-du-Puy

    8 Rue Saint-Vosy
    43700 Brives-Charensac
Crédit photo : Meunier, A. (17..-18.. ; dessinateur) 1788 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1626
Offer of transfer to Chartreux
1677
Laying the first stone
1695
Final transfer of monks
1791
Dispersion of the community
1818
Opening of the small seminar
1992
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Remaining parts including: Women's Chapel with its gate on the street; main entrance body with entrance hall and gate and fireplace of the north room of the ground floor; building of foreigners with its central entrance hall on the ground floor and its four walled rooms with fireplaces or (and) alcoves on the 1st floor; high and low galleries on the courtyard of these two buildings with doors surmounted by angelots; South French garden with its pond and its beds; façade of the present church with its nave (former refectory of the monks) and its sacristy (former refectory of the brothers) , the clock tower and the old capitular hall ; galleries of the large cloister (cad. C 81, 83, 84, 89): registration by order of 21 August 1992

Key figures

Just de Serres - Bishop of Puy (1627) Gives the maladry to the Chartreux.
Jean de Boyer - Prior (1677-1684) Supervises the final foundation.
Jean-Antoine Mariac - Revolutionary buyer Turn the site into stationery.
Augustin Péala - Superior of the seminar (1816) Buy the chartreuse for the Church.
Gustave de Pélacot - Former student (1840-1907) Becoming Archbishop of Chambéry.
Jacques Arsac - Former student (1929-) Academician and computer pioneer.

Origin and history

The Chartreuse Notre-Dame-du-Puy, located in Brives-Charensac, came into being in 1626 when the Chartreux of Bonnefoy, threatened by Protestant incursions, received the offer to settle in the old maladry of Corsac. In 1627, the bishop of Puy, Just de Serres, officially ceded the site to the monks, but the construction progressed slowly due to financial and legal difficulties. The Chartreux gradually acquired land, including the fief de Villeneuve-de-Corsac in 1675, after overcoming a conflict with the cathedral chapter of Puy over ancient rights.

The first stone of the convent was laid in 1677, but the work extended until the Revolution. In 1695, the majority of the monks of Bonnefoy finally joined Brives-Charensac. The monastery, unfinished at the end of the eighteenth century, then had only 10 religious. The Revolution dispersed the community in 1791: the buildings were sold as national goods, partially demolished (including the church in 1798), and transformed into stationery by a private purchaser.

In 1816, the Séminaire du Puy bought the Chartreuse, which became a small seminary in 1818, welcoming up to 200 students in the mid-19th century. Closed in 1906 following the law of separation of churches and the state, the site serves during the world wars of civilian internment and then military hospital. Ranked a historic monument in 1992, it now houses an educational centre, Paradis High School, offering training from primary to bachelor's.

The preserved architectural heritage includes elements from the 17th and 18th centuries: part of the large cloister, the main house body, woodwork and a wrought iron gate. The refectory, transformed into a church after 1826, and the clock tower also remain. Historical land estates, such as Sinzelles and Fay-la-Triouleyre, bear witness to the extent of the possessions of the Chartreux.

Among the notable figures, Jean de Boyer (prieur in 1677) played a key role in the foundation, while former students such as Gustave de Pélacot (bishop of Troyes) and Jacques Arsac (academic and computerist) illustrated the educational background of the place. The Chartreuse thus embodies both a monastic heritage, a school adaptation and a symbol of revolutionary upheavals.

External links