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Thon Cordeliers Convent aux Thons dans les Vosges

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Couvent
Vosges

Thon Cordeliers Convent

    Le Bourg
    88410 Les Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Couvent des Cordeliers des Thons
Crédit photo : Patineurjul - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1451
Papal authorization
1452
Foundation of the convent
1483
Church Consecration
1790
Revolutionary closure
1791
Sale of goods
1945
Registration MH (covent)
1980
MH classification (church)
2006
Start of restorations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Convent, with the exception of the church: inscription by decree of 20 June 1945; Church (Box AC 130): Order of 15 December 1980

Key figures

Guillaume de Saint-Loup - Founder Sponsor with his wife in 1452.
Jeanne de Choiseul - Founder Wife of Guillaume de Saint-Loup.
Jean II de Lorraine - Political support Duke supporting the foundation.
Nicolas V - Pope Authorized the convent in 1451.
Claude Laillet - Superior in 1790 Last in charge before closing.
Erard du Châtelet - Benefactor Gifts in 1590 and 1662.

Origin and history

The convent of the Cordeliers des Thons was founded in 1452 on the initiative of Guillaume de Saint-Loup and his wife Jeanne de Choiseul, with the support of Duke John II of Lorraine. Authorized by Pope Nicholas V in 1451, it was built by the minor brothers of Dole in Petit-Thon, near the border of the diocese of Besançon. The church, dedicated to Notre-Dame-des-Anges, was consecrated in 1483. The convent lived thanks to donations from local lords (such as Mathieu de Saint-Loup or Erard du Châtelet), rents, and farm incomes. His accounts, held until 1791, reveal a rigorous management allocated to the maintenance, the food of the religious, and their movements.

The French Revolution rang the bell of the convent: closed in 1790, it housed only four religious, including the superior Claude Laillet, who joined the Constitutional Church. The goods were sold in 1791 and turned into a farm. In 1812, the site was divided among three brothers, explaining the three distinct facades visible today. The church and part of the buildings were classified or listed as historical monuments between 1945 and 1980. Since 2006, the Saône Lorraine association has been restoring the site to establish a sacred art museum and cultural centre.

Today, the convent is distinguished by its exceptional state of conservation for a Franciscan ensemble in the northeast. The northern part, owned by the association, houses the former houses of the religious, while the central part hosts a restaurant of Vosgesian specialties, a museum (with a reconstituted cordon cell, an 18th-century prison, and exhibitions), and a cloister with Saint Francis fountain. The south side remains private. The restoration works, like those of the choir in 2019, aim to preserve this unique heritage, witness to five centuries of religious and local history.

External links