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Protestant Temple of Nantes en Loire-Atlantique

Loire-Atlantique

Protestant Temple of Nantes

    15 bis Place Edouard Normand
    44000 Nantes

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1534
Martyre by Nicolas Valleton
1560
First temple assigned
1598
Signature of the edict of Nantes
1805
Carmelite Chapel used
1855
Inauguration of the Temple Place de l'Edit-de-Nantes
23 septembre 1943
Destruction by bombardment
26 octobre 1958
Inauguration of the current temple
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Nicolas Valleton - Protestant Martyr Burned in 1534 for the Affair of Placards.
Henri IV - King of France Signed by Nantes in 1598.
Henri-Théodore Driollet - Municipal architect Designs the temple of 1855.
Paul Bellamy - Mayor of Nantes (1910-1928) Protestant figure, founder of the mayors of France.
Raoul Duval - Pastor Launch the post-1943 reconstruction.
Victoire Durand-Gasselin - Architect Author of the plans of the present temple (1956).

Origin and history

The Protestant temple of Nantes, inaugurated in 1956 in Place Édouard-Normand, is the fourth reformed place of worship in the city. It succeeds a building destroyed by a bombardment in 1943, which was built in 1855 place de l'Édit-de-Nantes. The latter had replaced a Carmelite chapel, used as a temple from 1805 to 1855 after the concordat of 1801. The current site, chosen for urban constraints, also houses a memorial dedicated to the Reformation and edict of Nantes.

The Protestant origins in Nantes date back to the 16th century, with figures like Nicolas Valleton, burned in 1534 for his role in the Placard Affair. The city, commercially influential with Protestant countries (Netherlands, United Kingdom), is home to clandestine cults despite the revocation of the edict of Nantes in 1685. Local nobles, such as the Rohans or the Châtillons, protect the Reformed on their lands during the religious wars. The first official temple, awarded in 1560 in the Loquidy district, marks the beginning of an organized presence.

The current architecture, designed by Victoire Durand-Gasselin (granddaughter of Hippolyte Durand-Gasselin and niece of former Mayor Paul Bellamy), includes a 400 m2 cult room, a multipurpose basement room, and spaces dedicated to historical memory. The temple symbolizes the resilience of the Protestant community in Nantes, linked to personalities such as Pastor Raoul Duval, the initiator of its post-war reconstruction. Its inauguration in 1958 ended a century of successive migrations for the reformed cult in the city.

The Hauts-Pavés - Saint-Félix district, where the temple stands, concentrates a diverse religious history. The nearby Mercy Cemetery once housed a Protestant and Jewish neighbourhood, reflecting the exclusions suffered by these communities. The present building, with its memorial, also recalls the role of Nantes in the edict of 1598, signed by Henri IV to guarantee freedom of conscience, before its dismissal in 1685.

The successive destructions (fire of the Temple of Blain in 1591, bombardment of 1943) and reconstructions illustrate the historical tensions around Protestantism in France. The temple of 1855, work of architect Henri-Théodore Driollet, had cost 120,000 gold francs, financed by the state, the city and parishioners. His disappearance during World War II motivated the construction of the current building, designed to meet community and commemorative needs.

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