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Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy en Meurthe-et-Moselle

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Porte
Meurthe-et-Moselle

Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy

    Rue Sainte-Catherine
    54100 Nancy
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Porte Sainte-Catherine de Nancy 
Crédit photo : Axel41 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1761
Initial construction
1768
Moving the door
1792
Named *National Volunteers*
15 janvier 1925
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Porte Sainte-Catherine : classification by decree of 15 January 1925

Key figures

Stanislas Leszczyński - Duke of Lorraine and sponsor Initiator of the urban plan including the door.
Richard Mique - Architect Designer of the Saint Catherine Gate and Barracks.
Catherine Opalinska - Wife of Stanislas Dedication of the monument, mother of Marie Leszczyńska.

Origin and history

The Saint Catherine Gate is an iconic building of Nancy, erected in the 18th century under the impulse of Stanislas Leszczyński, former king of Poland and Duke of Lorraine. In a doric style, it was designed by architect Richard Mique, also in charge of the nearby Sainte-Catherine barracks. This gate is part of a vast urban project aimed at modernizing the city, in harmony with elements such as Stanislas Square. Its initial location, close to this square, was changed in 1768 to integrate it into the wall of the city, once the barracks were completed.

The door owes its name to Catherine Opalinska, wife of Stanislas and mother of the Queen of France Marie Leszczyńska, to whom it is dedicated. During the French Revolution, it was renamed the National Volunteer Gate in tribute to the Lorrains who fought the Prussians in 1792, reflecting its symbolic role in a military context marked by the proximity of the barracks. Ranked a historic monument in 1925, it now bears witness to Nancy's architectural and political heritage under the influence of the Enlightenment.

Architecturally, the Sainte-Catherine Gate illustrates the nascent neo-classicism, with a sober and balanced structure characteristic of the Doric style. His history also reflects the political upheavals of his time, from his creation under an enlightened duke to his revolutionary re-appropriation. It remains a symbol of Stanislas' urban ambitions, blending Lorraine's heritage and French influences, while embodying the transition between the Ancient Regime and the modern era.

External links