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Church of Saint Louis of Marseille à Marseille 13ème dans les Bouches-du-Rhône

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise moderne
Bouches-du-Rhône

Church of Saint Louis of Marseille

    22 Avenue du Rove
    13013 Marseille 13ème
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Église Saint-Louis de Marseille
Crédit photo : Rvalette - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1929
Appointment of Bishop Dubourg
1932
Land donation
1933
Start of work
15 octobre 1933
Blessing of the ground
1935
Church Inauguration
1989
Historical monument classification
2016
Restoration of the Way of the Cross
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The whole church (Box M 22): inscription by decree of 14 December 1989

Key figures

Jean-Louis Sourdeau - Architect Designed the church despite the pentagonal terrain.
Carlo Sarrabezolles - Sculptor Realize Christ, angels and archangel Gabriel.
Gabriel Pourtal - Father and priest Project promoter for 900 faithful.
Jac Martin-Ferrières - Painter Author of the path of the cross in fresco.
Jean Gaudin - Master glassmaker Invents the "transparent mosaic" of stained glass.
François Carli - Sculptor Creates the Virgin with the Child in plaster.
Louis Botinelly - Sculptor Realize the stele of Saint Fortunee.
Mgr Dubourg - Bishop of Marseille Initiator of local religious revival.

Origin and history

The church of Saint Louis of Marseilles replaces a first parish church of the eighteenth century, which became too small after the First World War. The industrial development of the northern districts (savonneries, refineries, mills) and the influx of faithful make it necessary to build a new building. In 1932, a parishioner offered a pentagonal plot of land of 1,100 m2, surrounded by factories, where architect Jean-Louis Sourdeau took up the challenge of building a church of 900 places despite the irregular shape of the land. The building, inaugurated in 1935, innovates by its pioneering use of reinforced concrete, both for the structure and for the carved decorations.

The main façade, decorated with a monumental Christ of 6.5 m and an archangel Gabriel of 9 m at the top of the bell tower, is the work of sculptor Carlo Sarrabezolles, inventor of a technique of direct size in fresh concrete. The interior houses frescoes of the Way of the Cross by Jac Martin-Ferrières, stained glass in "transparent mosaic" by Jean Gaudin, and sculptures such as a Madonna with the Child in plaster or a marble stele of Saint Fortunée by Louis Botinelly. The dome of 21 m in diameter, pierced by roses forming a religious hymn, illustrates the architectural audacity of the time.

Ranked a historic monument in 1989, the church symbolizes the religious and urban revitalization of the Marseille suburbs in the inter-war period. Its style combines technical modernity (armed concrete, innovative stained glass) and traditional symbolism (chrism, Latin inscriptions), reflecting tensions between industrialization and faith. Restorations, such as the path of the cross in 2016, bear witness to its heritage value.

The Saint-Louis district, marked by industry (savonneries, sweets), sees this church as a gathering place for a working population seeking identity. Father Gabriel Pourtal, appointed by Bishop Dubourg in 1929, played a key role in the project, combining pastoral ambition and adaptation to urban constraints. The building thus embodies an architectural and spiritual response to the social changes of Marseilles in the 1930s.

External links