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Convent of the Carmel of Angers en Maine-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent
Maine-et-Loire

Convent of the Carmel of Angers

    41 Rue Lionnaise
    49000 Angers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Couvent du Carmel dAngers
Crédit photo : Lexou - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1626
Installation of Carmelites
1638
Acquisition of the Puy-Gaillard hotel
1646-1666
Construction of cloister wings
1712-1721
Building of the Church of St. Theresa
1808-1810
Conversion into hospice
1944
Partial destruction by bombardment
1963
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades including the entrance gate; roofs on Lionaise Street; south-west facade and corresponding roof overlooking the courtyard of honour; facades and roofs of buildings surrounding the cloister; cloister; gardens; large staircase; pre-choir and choir of nuns (cad. K 55, 69): Order of 18 February 1963

Key figures

Jean de Leaumont - Lord of Puygaillard and Governor of Anjou Initial owner of the integrated hotel
Denis Aubry - Architect-mason Co-author of cloister wings (1646-1666)
Pierre Moreau - Architect-mason Denis Aubry's collaborator for the cloister
Henri Enguehard - Architect of the 20th century Church builder in 1952
Veuve Descazeaux - Marquise de Ferolle North Wing Commander (circa 1740)

Origin and history

The Carmelite convent of Angers came into being in 1626, when the Carmelites settled in the city. The community acquired in 1638 the hotel of Puy-Gaillard, a 15th century building renovated in 1574, to become its monastery. The wings of the cloister, built between 1646 and 1666 by architects Denis Aubry and Pierre Moreau, as well as the church of Sainte-Thérèse (1712-1721) complete the whole. The site, partially destroyed in 1944, was restored in the 1950s.

During the Revolution, the convent served as an orphanage and prison for women, before becoming a hospice in 1810. The Carmelites reinvested the site in 1855 and made changes, such as the chapel of the Hermitage (1873). The convent, classified as a historical monument in 1963, retains remarkable elements: cloister, gardens, and 17th and 18th century facades, witness to its architectural and religious evolution.

The hotel of Puy-Gaillard, integrated into the monastery, has remains of 15th century stone and wood, while the lateral wings of the entrance courtyard, built around 1740, reflect the aristocratic influence of the time. The 1944 bombings severely damaged the church, rebuilt in 1952 by Henri Enguehard. Today, the site mixes medieval, classical and modern heritage, illustrating almost four centuries of Angelian history.

External links