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Building (rest of the Jesuit novitiate) à Bordeaux en Gironde

Gironde

Building (rest of the Jesuit novitiate)

    5 Bis Rue du Noviciat
    33800 Bordeaux

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1571
College Foundation
1593
Novitiate Foundation
1612
Construction begins
1653
Monumental door added
1762
Dissolution of the Jesuits
1800 (début)
Partial Demolition
1965
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades on street and courtyard and the corresponding roofs (Box S 1070): inscription by decree of 14 September 1965

Key figures

François Borgia - General of the Jesuit Order Founded the college in 1571.

Origin and history

The present building is a vestige of the Novitiate of the Jesuits of Bordeaux, founded in the seventeenth century. This college, the twelfth establishment of the order in France, was created around 1571 under the impulse of François Borgia, general of the Jesuits. Originally installed near the chapel of the Madeleine, the novitiate was officially founded in 1593, but only became operational in 1607. The Jesuits occupied several sites, including the Priory of St. James and a house dependent on the Church of St. Croix, before building their chapel and novitiate from 1612.

In 1653, a monumental door decorated with the coat of arms of donors was added to the chapel. However, the dissolution of the Society of Jesus in 1762 led to the sequestration of the buildings. Acquired by the city of Bordeaux in 1766, the site was partially demolished in the early 19th century to break through the streets of Novitiate and the Portal. Today, only the buildings of numbers 7 to 19 on Rue du Novitiate remain, originally forming a single building.

The facades on street and courtyard, as well as the corresponding roofs, were inscribed in the Historical Monuments by order of 14 September 1965. These remains recall the educational and religious importance of the Jesuits in Bordeaux, as well as the subsequent urban transformations that have fragmented this historical architectural ensemble.

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