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Saint Stanislas Church of Bruno City à Dourges dans le Pas-de-Calais

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise moderne
Patrimoine minier
Pas-de-Calais

Saint Stanislas Church of Bruno City

    Rue Félix-Faure
    62119 Dourges
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Église Saint-Stanislas de la cité Bruno
Crédit photo : Jérémy-Günther-Heinz Jähnick (1988–) Descriptionph - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1905-1908
Construction of Bruno City
1924
Mobile Chaplain Service
1927
Blessing of the Church
25 novembre 2009
Registration for Historic Monuments
2011
Destruction of mining offices
30 juin 2012
UNESCO classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The entire church (Cd. AK 240) and the facades and roofs of its presbytery, located in Bruno without number (Cd. AK 241): inscription by decree of 25 November 2009

Key figures

Ernest Delille - Dourges Mining Architect Manufacturer of nearby Foch Garden City.
Paul Abadie - Inspiring Architect Style of the bell towers taken for the lantern.
Henriette de Clercq - Founder of the Mining Company Fosse named Sainte-Henriette in his honour.
Louis-Georges Mulot - Survey contractor Directed the first works of pit number 1.

Origin and history

St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. St. This city, inspired by the principles of the Socialist Garden Cities, is considered the first of its kind in the region. By 1924, a car service was organized to allow a chaplain to serve the Polish cities, reflecting the piety of this community.

The church itself was blessed in 1927 and conceived in an unusual Romano-Byzantine style, evoking the towers of Egyptian temples. Its lantern, covered with a laying bulb, recalls the bell towers of architect Paul Abadie, but simplified. It was built to meet the spiritual needs of Polish miners, mostly Catholic, and became a symbol of their identity in the mining basin.

Bruno City, with its church, presbytery, school and party hall, was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site on June 30, 2012, as part of site No.44 of the Nord-Pas-de-Calais Mining Basin. This classification recognizes its historical and architectural importance, linked to coal mining and Polish immigration. The church and its presbytery had already been inscribed in historical monuments on 25 November 2009.

The nearby Dourges Mine Company pit 2-2 bis played a central role in local industrial history. Operated in 1856, it was destroyed during the First World War, then rebuilt with reinforced concrete. Nationalized in 1946, it became a concentration seat before closing definitively in 1970. Hollows n°87 and n°92 from its exploitation are today protected natural areas.

The architecture of St. Stanislas Church, although signed by an unknown architect, bears witness to a fusion between Polish religious traditions and local influences. Its style, marked by Byzantine and Egyptian elements, makes it a unique building in the mining landscape. Bruno City, meanwhile, illustrates the integration of immigrant workers into the social and industrial fabric of Nord-Pas-de-Calais at the beginning of the 20th century.

Today, the church and its presbytery are run by a diocesan association. Although the offices of the pit were destroyed in 2011, the engine room of well 2 bis remains, and the site could host part of the Grand Lille Express Network in the future. This heritage, both industrial and cultural, perpetuates the memory of Polish miners and the coal age in the region.

External links