Ursulin implantation 1631 (≈ 1631)
Beginning of congregation installation.
1657
Construction begins
Construction begins 1657 (≈ 1657)
Launch of the work of the convent.
1792
End of Conventual Use
End of Conventual Use 1792 (≈ 1792)
Closing of the Ursulines convent.
1992
Protection of the garden
Protection of the garden 1992 (≈ 1992)
Inventory of Historical Monuments.
1995
Church ranking
Church ranking 1995 (≈ 1995)
Protection under Historic Monuments.
début XXe siècle
Transformation into a courthouse
Transformation into a courthouse début XXe siècle (≈ 2004)
New posting of the building.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Garden of the former convent, present public garden, including its walls, located rue Paul-Duplan and rue du Marché (Box IN 514): inscription by order of 6 July 1992. Church of the former convent, including its underground part, and the choir of the nuns (Box IN 159): Order of 3 February 1995
Key figures
Joseph Lingré - Niverese Master Architect
Designer of the church and convent.
Origin and history
The courthouse of Bourges, initially a convent of the Ursulines, was built from 1657 to meet the spiritual and pastoral needs of this religious order. The buildings, organized around courtyards and a garden, illustrate the 17th century classical architecture, with a church wrongly attributed to Jules Hardouin-Mansart, but designed by Joseph Lingré, Nivernais master architect. The facade and interior elevation, marked by ionic pilasters and a hemispheric dome, reflect the aesthetic cannons of the era.
The convent, active until 1792, became a major seminary in the 19th century before being converted into a courthouse at the beginning of the 20th century. The successive transformations (1821-1920s) altered the original structures, notably removing the galleries of the cloister. Despite these changes, the ensemble retains a major heritage value, symbolizing the rise of women's orders during the Counter-Reform in France.
The church and its choir, as well as the public garden (former convent garden), have been protected under the Historic Monuments since 1992 and 1995. These elements, combined with the rigour of Joseph Lingré's architecture, testify to the importance of religious foundations in the Berry in the 17th century, in a context of post-Trident Catholic renewal.
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