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Convent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier dans le Vaucluse

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent
Vaucluse

Convent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier

    141 Chemin de Sainte-Garde
    84210 Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Couvent Sainte-Garde-des-Champs de Saint-Didier
Crédit photo : Véronique PAGNIER - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1666
Foundation of the Chapel
1699
Establishment of the Congregation
1747
Consecration of the new chapel
1818
Repurchase and creation of the seminar
1859-1863
Construction of the current chapel
1906
Closing of the seminar
1981
Registration for historical monuments
2013
Installation of the Studium
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs, including those of the chapel with its side gate with a niche with statue (Box B 290): inscription by order of 23 April 1981

Key figures

Alexandre Martin - Curé de Saint-Didier Founded the chapel in 1666.
Laurent-Dominique Bertet - Avignon priest Co-founder of the congregation in 1699.
Albert-Venance Morel - Curé de Venasque Repurchased the site in 1818 for the seminary.
Joseph Pougnet - Architect Designed the current chapel (1859-1863).
Emmanuel Bernard - Abbreviated Defended the Provençal at the seminary.
Léon Barnouin - Former student Cistercian order in the 19th century.

Origin and history

The convent of Sainte-Garde-des-Champs was founded in 1666, when Alexandre Martin, parish priest of Saint-Didier, erected a chapel dedicated to Notre-Dame de Sainte-Garde and a retreat building. In 1699, avignonese priests, including Laurent-Dominique Bertet and Joseph François de Salvador, founded the Congregation of the Missionary Priests of Notre-Dame de Sainte-Garde, active until the Revolution. The site, which was sold as a national property, was then home to a glass factory and then to a magnatery, before being bought in 1818 by Abbé Albert-Venance Morel to install a small seminary royally recognized in 1824.

In the 19th century, the convent developed under the impulse of Abbé Joseph Pougnet, who built the current chapel (1859-1863) and formed generations of pupils, including felibres like Félix Gras or Clovis Hugues, influenced by Abbé Emmanuel Bernard, defender of the Provençal. After the 1906 law, the seminary closed and the premises became a military hospital during the First World War, then a School of Outdoors (1930-1971), before being restored by the Notre-Dame de Vie Institute from 1981.

The site, inscribed in the historical monuments in 1981 for its facades and roofs (including the chapel), bears the stigma of its tormented history: partial destruction to the Revolution, attempted fire by the Germans in 1944 (traces visible on pillars), and recent rehabilitation to accommodate a Theological Studium since 2013. Its current architecture, shaped in the 19th century, combines religious heritage and successive functional adaptations.

External links