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Protestant Temple of Carla-Bayle dans l'Ariège

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine protestant
Temple protestant

Protestant Temple of Carla-Bayle

    Le Bourg
    09130 Carla-Bayle
Ownership of the municipality
Temple protestant de Carla-Bayle
Temple protestant de Carla-Bayle
Temple protestant de Carla-Bayle
Temple protestant de Carla-Bayle
Crédit photo : PierreG 09 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1561
Authorization of Calvinism
1625
Headquarters of Mas-d-Azil
1685
Revocation of the edict of Nantes
1791
Sale as a national good
1884
Reconstruction of the temple
1992
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Protestant Temple (Box B 97): Registration by Order of 30 September 1992

Key figures

Jeanne d’Albret - Queen of Navarre and Countess of Foix Authorized Calvinism in 1561.
Jean Bayle - Pastor at Carla Father of Pierre Bayle, local Protestant figure.
Jacob Bayle - Pastor and brother of Pierre Bayle Died imprisoned in 1685 for his faith.
Pierre Bayle - Philosopher and writer Born in Carla, symbol of Reformed thought.
Jacques de Saint-Blancard - Defender of Mas-d-Azil Directed Protestant resistance in 1625.

Origin and history

The Protestant temple of Carla-Bayle is part of the turbulent history of Protestantism in Ariège, a region marked by the wars of religion and the revocation of the edict of Nantes. Under the Ancien Régime, the city, then called Le Carla, was part of the county of Foix, a Protestant fiefdom influenced by Jeanne d'Albret, queen of Navarre, who authorized Calvinism in 1561. From that date on, the reformers settled in neighbouring villages, including Le Carla, where the Bayle family – notably Pastor Jean Bayle, Pierre Bayle's father – played a central role. The original temple, seized after 1685, was converted into a presbytery before being sold as a national property in 1791.

The French Revolution restored freedom of worship, allowing the Ariegian Protestants, 7,000 around Mas-d-Azil, to claim their places of prayer. In 1819, the local consistory demanded that the temple be returned, then in ruins, but the cost of restoration forced government intervention. The current building, built in 1884, adopts a typical architecture of the Reformed Temples: two double-gallery floors and a central carved wooden pulpit. A symbol of resilience, it was listed as a historical monument in 1992 and today hosts cultural activities in addition to the offices.

The temple is inseparable from the memory of Pierre Bayle (1647–1706), a philosopher born in Carla, whose father and brother, Jacob Bayle, were pastors on the spot. The latter, imprisoned at the Château Trompette for his faith, died in 1685, illustrating the post-Revocation persecutions. The unsuccessful siege of Mas-d-Azil by royal troops in 1625, led by the Marshal of Themines, also bears witness to the local Protestant resistance. These events forged the reformed identity of the territory, still alive through this heritage and memorial place.

External links