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Former convent of Oveglia à Cagnano en Haute-corse

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent
Haute-corse

Former convent of Oveglia

    Ortale
    20228 Cagnano
Ancien couvent dOveglia
Ancien couvent dOveglia
Ancien couvent dOveglia
Ancien couvent dOveglia
Ancien couvent dOveglia
Ancien couvent dOveglia
Ancien couvent dOveglia
Ancien couvent dOveglia

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1540
Initial construction
1613
Expansion of the convent
1789
Sale as a national good
1927
Partial collapse
1990
Protection under MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Information non disponible - No character cited The source text does not mention any names.

Origin and history

The former convent of Oveglia, located in Cagnano in Upper Corsica, consists of a church with an elongated plan and conventual buildings organised around a cloister. Built between the 15th and 17th centuries, the church has a central nave vaulted in a glass cradle, flanked by three side chapels (a fourth having disappeared during restorations). Its flat bedside, vaulted in anse-de-panier, and its gate decorated with twin pilasters reflect a sober but elegant architecture. The clocher tower, initially isolated, was integrated into the choir enlarged in the 17th century. Its summit, once with superimposed bells, is now surmounted by a wrought iron cross.

Until the French Revolution, the convent housed a seminary and some sixty monks and conversants of the order of the Capuchins. Confiscated as a national property in 1789, the whole was divided: the church was returned to the commune, while the convent buildings became private property. In the 20th century, the partial abandonment of the site led to the collapse of a wall section in 1927. The current remains include the caves carved in the rock, the cells on the first floor, and a rectangular room behind the choir, an old chapter hall.

The elements protected under the Historic Monuments since 1990 include the chapel (registered on 30 January) and the ruins of the convent (registered on 25 April). The accuracy of the location of the site is considered poor (note 5/10), and its present state is the result of a turbulent history, between religious use, revolutionary spoliation and modern degradation. There is no information on its current accessibility (visits, rentals, or accommodation).

External links