Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Temple des Billettes (former Carmelite Convent) à Paris 1er dans Paris 4ème

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine protestant
Temple protestant

Temple des Billettes (former Carmelite Convent)

    22-26 Rue des Archives
    75004 Paris 4e Arrondissement
Ownership of the municipality
Temple des Billettes à Paris
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Temple des Billettes ancien couvent des Carmes-Billettes
Crédit photo : FLLL - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1294
Foundation of the Chapel
1427
Add cloister
1754-1758
Reconstruction of the church
1793-1795
Revolutionary sale
1808
Attribution to Lutherans
1983
Opening of the new organ
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The former cloister of the Carmelites-Billettes (Box 04: 02 AJ 3) : classification by list of 1862 - The Church of the Billettes (Protestant temple) (Box 04: 02 AJ 3): by order of 8 February 1990

Key figures

Philippe IV le Bel - King of France Confiscated Jonathas' house.
Jacques Hardouin-Mansart de Sagonne - Architect Suspected author of the 18th century project.
Jonathas - Character of the Legend Accused of desecrating the hospital.
Napoléon Ier - Emperor of the French Attributed the church to Lutherans in 1808.
Dorothée von Medem - Patron Finished the bell in 1820.
Philippe Kaeppelin - Sculptor Realized the altar and the lutrin (1980s).

Origin and history

The Temple des Billettes, located 24 rue des Archives in Paris, originated in a 13th-century medieval legend: a Jew named Jonathas allegedly desecrated a hostie, which would have bled and stolen after being thrown into boiling water. This "miracle of the Billettes" gave rise to the construction of a chapel in 1294 on the site of the house of Jonathas, confiscated by Philip IV the Bel. The chapel became a major pilgrimage site, leading to the reconstruction of the church and the addition of a cloister in 1427, the only medieval vestige remaining in Paris.

In the 17th century, the Carmelites of Rennes took over the church and envisaged its reconstruction, but the project was blocked by conflicts with the neighbouring parish of Saint-Jean-en-Grève. It was only in the 18th century, under the direction of architect Jacques Hardouin-Mansart de Sagonne, that the present church was built between 1754 and 1758. The extended rectangular plan of a rotunda, inspired by the Invalides, and decorative motifs such as pots and palms, reflect the influence of the Mansart dynasty. Despite persistent legal disputes, the project was finally approved in 1753.

At the Revolution, the church and the convent were disused and partially sold. In 1808, Napoleon I attributed the Lutheran Consistory of the Seine, marking his transition to Protestantism. The interior design, mainly from the Empire and the July monarchy, includes an additional gallery and an organ from the Swedish embassy. In the 19th century, worship was celebrated alternately in French and German, attracting an aristocratic congregation, including the Duchess Dorothy von Medem, who financed the bell in 1820.

Today, the Temple of Billettes still houses a Lutheran Protestant parish and hosts concerts and exhibitions in its medieval cloister. Recent changes include an altar and a lutrin carved by Philippe Kaeppelin in the 1980s, as well as a new organ inaugurated in 1983. The site, classified as a Historical Monument, thus retains a double memory: that of a medieval Catholic devotion and that of an emblematic Protestant temple in Paris.

External links