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Old Chapel of the Carmes Floors à Lille dans le Nord

Nord

Old Chapel of the Carmes Floors

    55 Rue de Gand
    59800 Lille
Ancienne chapelle des Carmes Déchaussées
Ancienne chapelle des Carmes Déchaussées
Ancienne chapelle des Carmes Déchaussées
Ancienne chapelle des Carmes Déchaussées
Ancienne chapelle des Carmes Déchaussées
Ancienne chapelle des Carmes Déchaussées
Crédit photo : Velvet - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1616
Foundation of the convent
1623
Church completion
1645-1669
Reconstruction of the church
1790-1800
Expulsion and military reassignment
1856
Retrocession to sisters
1934
Historical monument classification
1991
Become a parish church
Années 2000
Reconversion to the City of the Gospel
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapelle des Carmes Grounds (former): inscription by order of 19 March 1934

Key figures

Isabelle d’Espagne - Founder with her husband Installed the Carmes unshoeed in Lille in 1616.
Archiduc Albert d’Autriche - Co-founder of the convent Husband of Isabelle, supported religious establishment.
Natalie Doignies - Benefactor in the 19th century Obtain the transfer of the site to Napoleon III.
Napoléon III - Emperor assigning the domain Granted the convent to the sisters in 1854.
Jacques Van Oost le Jeune - Painter inspiring the retable Author of *L.

Origin and history

The church of Sainte-Marie-Madeleine, located at 59 rue de Ghent in Lille, is the former chapel of the Carmes undressed, founded in 1616 by Isabelle of Spain and Archduke Albert of Austria. This convent, established near the Gate of Ghent, was built in the context of Counter-Reform, with a church completed in 1623. Religious, living in extreme poverty, devoted themselves to preaching and conferences for the people. The site suffered several fires (1625, 1638 for the convent; 1645 for the church), requiring reconstructions, including that of the church between 1646 and 1669, consecrated in 1676 by the bishop of Tournai.

During the French Revolution, the religious were expelled, and the convent was transformed into a military reserve, while the church served as a stable. The confiscated property was centralized among the Recollets. In 1854, Natalie Doignies obtained from Napoleon III the transfer of the estate to the sisters of the Daughters of the Child Jesus, who re-built the church (stalls, stands) and made it their mother house until the 20th century. The building, restored between 1963 and 1968, became a parish church in 1991 under the name of Sainte-Marie-Madeleine, before being converted in the early 2000s to a permanent exhibition, the City of the Gospel.

The church architecture, sober, is distinguished by its monumental altarpiece inspired by a work by Jacques Van Oost le Jeune, visible in Saint-André. The ionic capitals of the nave carry cartridges with Carmel's weapons and holy figures (Jesus, Mary, Joseph, Thérèse). Under the chapel there are still 240 monks. Ranked a historic monument in 1934, it now embodies a religious, military and cultural heritage, reflecting the upheavals of Lille since the 17th century.

External links