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Protestant Temple à Dieulefit dans la Drôme

Drôme

Protestant Temple

    5 Rue de l'Horloge
    26220 Dieulefit
Temple protestant
Temple protestant
Temple protestant
Temple protestant
Temple protestant
Temple protestant
Temple protestant
Crédit photo : Marianne Casamance - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1805
Land transfer
4 août 1806
First worship
8 novembre 1810
Temple Consecration
1821
Interior fittings
1831
Modification of the vault
7 décembre 2010
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The Protestant temple and its parcel, in full (Box AB 430): inscription by order of 7 December 2010

Key figures

Fulcrand Brunet - Craft glassware Author of the temple's geometric windows.
Marguerite Soubeyran - Director of Beauvallon School Actor of the local resistance.
Catherine Krafft - Educator at Beauvallon Involved in the shelter of the persecuted.

Origin and history

The Protestant temple of Dieulefit was built at the beginning of the 19th century on land ceded by the commune in 1805 in the district of Châteauras. As early as 4 August 1806, a first cult was celebrated there, before its official consecration on 8 November 1810. This 32-metre-long rectangular building, typical of the Protestant neo-classical style, was gradually embellished: organ and stands added in 1821, then replaced the ceiling with a vault in 1831. Its geometric stained glass windows, surrounded by colourful vegetal friezes, were made by artisan Fulbrand Brunet.

During the Second World War, Dieulefit became a refuge for Jews and resistors, like the Chambon-sur-Lignon. The local pastor, in collaboration with the priest and the secretary of town hall, organized the manufacture of false papers to protect the persecuted. This period marked deeply the history of the temple, now inscribed in historical monuments since 7 December 2010.

Architecturally, the temple is distinguished by its sober facade surmounted by a bell tower housing a clock. Originally girded by an external grid removed in the 20th century, it illustrates the austerity and functionality of Protestant places of worship of the time. Its recent inscription as a historical monument underscores its heritage and memorial importance, linked to both religious history and the Resistance.

External links