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Protestant Temple of Suvigné à Souvigné dans les Deux-Sèvres

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine protestant
Temple protestant
Deux-Sèvres

Protestant Temple of Suvigné

    Le Bourg
    79800 Souvigné
Temple protestant de Souvigné
Temple protestant de Souvigné
Temple protestant de Souvigné
Crédit photo : Eliane Promis - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVIIe siècle
Restoration of the church of the priory
1840-1841
Work on the old church
1865
Abandoned from the old church
1866
Project launch
1868
Manufactures of furniture
1870
Completion of work
21 septembre 1998
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Temple, including its interior decoration (Box AB 24): inscription by decree of 21 September 1998

Key figures

Bergeron - Architect Designer of the temple in 1866.
Pierre Garnier - Carpenter Director of furniture in 1868.

Origin and history

The Protestant temple of Souvigné was built on the former lands of the local priory, whose church, ruined during the Wars of Religion, had been restored in the seventeenth century and then abandoned in the Revolution. This building was then assigned to Protestant worship until 1865, when its oldness imposed the construction of a new temple.

In the years 1840-1841 work was undertaken on the old church, but a new temple project, established by architect Bergeron, was launched in 1866. Funding was provided that year, and the furniture, made by carpenter Pierre Garnier, was installed in 1868. The work was completed in 1870, giving rise to a grounded building with pendant vaults and a campanile.

The temple is distinguished by its three apses and its entrance porches resting on square perrons. The doors, decorated with lintels engraved with gospel words, reflect his religious use. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1998, it is now owned by the commune of Souvigné.

The former church of the Priory, linked to the religious conflicts of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, illustrates the cultural changes of the region. The present temple, with its sober and functional architecture, bears witness to the vitality of Protestantism in the Deux-Sèvres in the 19th century, as well as to the adaptation of places of worship to the needs of local communities.

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