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Jean-Jaurès National Centre and Museum in Castres dans le Tarn

Musée
Label Musée de France
Musée des hommes d'état et des Présidents
Tarn

Jean-Jaurès National Centre and Museum in Castres

    2 Place Pelisson
    81100 Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Centre national et musée Jean-Jaurès à Castres
Crédit photo : Didier Descouens - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
2000
1954
Creation of the Jaurès Museum
1er mai 1959
Exhibition of the centenary of Jaurès
1981
Museum transfer project
13 février 1988
Opening of the National Centre
2014
Centenary of the assassination of Jaurès
2024
Exhibition *IntimateJaurès*
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Home of Jean-Jaurès (cad. AX 371) : inscription by order of 28 December 1984

Key figures

Jean Jaurès - Politician and journalist Central figure of the museum, born in Castres.
Gaston Poulain - Conservator of Castres Museums Founder of the Jaurès museum in 1954.
Madeleine Rebérioux - Historian and President of the SEJ Scientific designer of the National Centre (1988).
François Mitterrand - President of the Republic Open the National Centre in 1988.
Vincent Auriol - Former President of the Fourth Republic Donor of objects for the 1959 exhibition.
Joëlle Arches - Director since 2022 Organizer of recent exhibitions (2024-2026).

Origin and history

The Jean-Jaurès National Centre and Museum is a municipal establishment in Castres (Tarn) dedicated to the life and time of Jean Jaurès. Created in 1954 as the Jaurès Museum, it became a national centre in 1988, separate from the Goya Museum. It is housed in the "Delga" building, Place Pélisson, and has the French museum label. Its museum journey revolves around permanent, temporary exhibitions and a research centre, spread over four levels.

The museum originated in 1954 when curator Gaston Poulain organized an exhibition for the 40th anniversary of Jean Jaurès's death. In 1959, a new exhibition, marked by the centenary of his birth, brought together 1,088 pieces, some of which were donated by personalities such as Vincent Auriol. Originally located in the bishop's palace (now Goya Museum), the museum gradually expanded before moving in 1988 to its current premises, after five years of scientific work led by historians such as Madeleine Rebérioux and Rolande Trempé.

The museum offers a chronological journey on the life of Jaurès (infancy in Castres, studies, political commitments) and on the rise of socialism in France in the 19th century. The upper floors house a conference room and archives accessible to researchers. Since the 2000s, its attendance has increased (from 9,000 to 12,000 visitors between 2008 and 2010), thanks to various temporary exhibitions, such as intimate Jaurès (2024) or Notre-Dame de Paris in the Jaurès century (2025). The Centre collaborates with national partners (National Assembly, Pantheon) and organizes annual symposia on Jamaican themes.

Jean Jaurès's home, located 5 rue Sœur-Richard, is a 19th century building classified as a Historic Monument in 1984. Owned by the Barbaza family (maternal side of Jaurès), it preserves elements of architecture typical of Castres, like stucco chimney tops. The attic, formerly dedicated to the manufacture of fabrics (family activity of the Jaurès), now houses archives and objects related to its memory.

The museum maintains close links with the Society of Jauresian Studies and academics, who design its museumography and exhibitions. Among the personalities who visited the museum were presidents (Charles de Gaulle, François Mitterrand), intellectuals (François Mauriac, Marcel Pagnol) and political figures (Guy Mollet, Jacques Duclos). Temporary exhibitions, often linked to current events (colonialism, religion, World War I), and commemorations (such as the centenary of his assassination in 2014) reinforce his national influence.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Téléphone : 05 63 62 41 83
  • Contact organisation : 05 63 62 41 83