Arrival of Ursulines 1615 (≈ 1615)
Installation in Macon to educate girls.
1675-1680
Construction of the convent
Construction of the convent 1675-1680 (≈ 1678)
Building on the plateau of the Baille.
1793
Transformation into prison
Transformation into prison 1793 (≈ 1793)
Incarceration of Lamartine's father.
1929
First entry MH
First entry MH 1929 (≈ 1929)
Protection of the cloister and staircase.
1962
Full registration MH
Full registration MH 1962 (≈ 1962)
Chapel and facades protected.
1968
Opening of the museum
Opening of the museum 1968 (≈ 1968)
Inauguration of the Ursuline Museum.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The parts of the seventeenth century including the cloister, the facades and roofs of the buildings on courtyard, the large staircase, as well as the three doors on the rue des Ursulines: inscription by order of 30 August 1929; The whole chapel (Box AY 63): inscription by decree of 30 May 1962; The facades and roofs of all the buildings of the former convent (Box AY 62): inscription by decree of 30 May 1962
Key figures
Gaspard Dinet - Bishop of Mâcon
Initiator of installation of Ursulines.
Père de Lamartine - Political prisoner
Incarcerated in the old prison in 1793.
Origin and history
The convent of the Ursulines of Mâcon, founded in the early seventeenth century, was built between 1675 and 1680 on the plateau of the Baille at the initiative of Bishop Gaspard Dinet. The Ursulines, an order dedicated to the education of young girls of the nobility and bourgeoisie, settled there in 1615. This convent became an emblematic place of female education in the region, before being requisitioned during the French Revolution.
In 1793, the building was transformed into a stopping house, where the father of the poet Lamartine was imprisoned, as evidenced by a commemorative plaque. After serving as a military barracks (Puthod Box) until 1929, he was returned to the city of Macon. Between 1963 and 1967, restoration work allowed its opening in 1968 as the Ursulines Museum, home to art and history collections.
The convent is partly inscribed in historical monuments: the cloister, the large staircase and three doors on street were in 1929, while the chapel and facades/roofs were protected in 1962. The failure of certain wings would be explained by financial difficulties. Today, the museum occupies spaces dedicated to prehistory (ground floor) and fine arts (floor).
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