Pentemont Abbey

Last updated

Pentemont Abbey
Abbaye de Penthemont
Abbaye de Penthemont - 2.jpg
Pentemont Abbey from Rue de Grenelle in 1898 by Eugène Atget
Paris department land cover location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Location within Paris
Monastery information
Full nameL'Abbaye Royale de Notre-Dame de Penthemont [1]
Order Cistercians
Established1217
Disestablished1790
Diocese Beauvais (1217–1672), Paris (1672–1790)
People
Founder(s) Philippe de Dreux, Milo of Nanteuil
Important associated figures Joséphine de Beauharnais, Louise Adélaïde de Bourbon, Louise d'Esparbès de Lussan, Martha Jefferson Randolph, Mary Jefferson Eppes, James Smithson
Architecture
Statusdisestablished
Heritage designation Logo monument historique - rouge ombre, encadre.svg Class MH(1983) Facades, roofs, grand salon and chapel
Inscribed MH(1983) Facade and roof of the Court of Honor
Inscribed MH(1992) Central salon and first floor [2]
Architect Pierre Contant d'Ivry (1756), Victor Baltard (1844)
Groundbreaking1756
Completion date1783
Site
Location
  • 37 Rue de Bellechasse – Principal buildings,
  • 39 Rue de Bellechasse – Hôtel du Génie,
  • 104 Rue de Grenelle – Pavillon de Penthemont,
  • 106 Rue de Grenelle – Temple Penthemont
7th arrondissement of Paris, France [3]
Coordinates 48°51′25.1″N2°19′18.6″E / 48.856972°N 2.321833°E / 48.856972; 2.321833

Pentemont Abbey (French : Abbaye de Penthemont, Pentemont, Panthemont or Pantemont) is a set of 18th and 19th-century buildings at the corner of Rue de Grenelle and Rue de Bellechasse in the 7th arrondissement of Paris. The complex had originally been a Cistercian monastery of nuns. The abbey was founded near Beauvais in 1217 and moved to its current site in Paris in 1672 at the behest of King Louis XIV. A reconstruction of the abbey was initiated in 1745 by the Abbess Marie-Catherine Béthisy de Mézières and work was completed in 1783. In the late 18th century, the abbey was one of the most prestigious educational institutions in Paris for daughters of the elite, including two of Thomas Jefferson's. The abbey also provided rooms for ladies of good standing who were in search of rest, including Joséphine de Beauharnais when the case of her separation from her first husband was heard.

Contents

The abbey was disestablished during the French Revolution and the buildings were turned over to military use, first as the home of the National Guard, then the Imperial Guard, and later the Cent-gardes. It continues to be occupied by the Ministère de la Défense with the exception of the former chapel, which since 1844 has been a Protestant church, the Temple de Pentemont. In August 2014 the Ministry of Defence, facing budget cuts due to austerity policies, sold the buildings to a real estate investment trust, Foncière des 6ème et 7ème Arrondissements de Paris, with plans to move all ministry offices out of the abbey by the end of October, 2016. [4]

History

Beauvais (1217–1672)

Picardie region location map.svg
Blue pog.svg
Pentemont Abbey
Original location of the Abbey from 1217-1672 southwest of Beauvais in Picardy

Philip of Dreux, the famed crusader bishop of Beauvais, wished to found a convent of the Cistercian order. In 1217 he set aside an orchard southwest of Beauvais, on which were traced out the plans for construction, as well as seven arpents (6-7 acres) of vines. Philip died before the project was completed and his successor, Bishop Milo of Nanteuil, raised the rest of the funds, and it was completed in 1218. Pope Gregory IX issued a bull from the Lateran Palace on the 8 June 1230 which sanctioned the new abbey and declared the funds raised for its endowment protected. [5] The abbey took its name, meaning mountain slope, from its location at the foot of the Montagne de St-Symphorien. [6]

In 1554 the abbey provided refuge to Charlotte I de Monceaux, the abbess of the neighboring Abbey of Saint-Paul, whose election as abbess was opposed by Henry II. She fled to Pentemont after the arrival of the king's soldiers at her own abbey. However, they followed her to Pentemont and demanded by force that she renounce her position, a request to which she was compelled to accede. [7]

In 1671, after the abbey was damaged in a flood, [8] and for economic and geographical reasons, the abbess Hélène de Tourville moved the abbey to Paris. At the time, the convent had twelve sisters. The previous building was demolished and returned to agricultural work as part of the Pentemont farm. [9]

Paris (1672–1790)

The unsuccessful proposal by Francois II Franque for the rebuilt Pentemont Abbey, as found in the Encyclopedie Abbaye de Penthemont - Projet de Franque.jpeg
The unsuccessful proposal by François II Franque for the rebuilt Pentemont Abbey, as found in the Encyclopédie

In Paris the abbey took up residence in a former convent, recently suppressed, of the Sisters of the Incarnate Word, located on Rue de Grenelle at the current site of the abbey. The sisters dedicated themselves to the education of young women and later added rooms in which women of good standing could find rest. The abbey quickly acquired a distinguished reputation and by the time of its dissolution in 1790 had revenues of 58,000 livres, a great sum for the era. [10]

The final abbess, Marie III Catherine de Béthisy de Mézières, spent 45 years and a great deal of money rebuilding and expanding the abbey. A competition for plans for a reconstruction attracted multiple proposals including one from the royal architect, François II Franque, which drew praise from Denis Diderot in the Encyclopédie for its combination of grandeur and simplicity. The winning proposal, however, was from Pierre Contant d'Ivry. [11]

The many famous students educated at the abbey included the noted abbess and princess Louise Adélaïde de Bourbon, [12] and Louise d'Esparbès de Lussan, the mistress of the Count of Artois, the future Charles X of France. [13] Thomas Jefferson's daughters Martha and Mary were both educated at the Pentemont Abbey while he was Minister to France. [14] Their entry into the school was sponsored by the wife of the Marquis de Lafayette. The future first lady Abigail Adams was shocked that Jefferson would send his girls to a Catholic school but he assured her that there were many Protestants at the abbey. Conditions were austere for the students, despite the presence of three princesses, with no fires until the water froze and a prohibition on speaking outside of class and recreation. Her time at the school led Martha, nicknamed Patsy, to write a letter to her father expressing her desire to become a nun. Jefferson quickly removed his daughters from the care of the convent. [15]

The abbey also provided elegant apartments to highborn women seeking independence from families or difficult marriages. The ladies were free to come and go as they liked, with constraints on the hours allowed outside the convent, often had their children and servants with them, and spent their evenings socializing and commiserating in the abbey's salons. One such resident was Joséphine de Beauharnais, the future Empress of France, during her separation from her first husband, Alexandre de Beauharnais. [16] The court granted her temporary independence from her husband and required her to stay at Pentemont with her children at the expense of Alexandre. [17] It is also speculated that James Smithson, the founder of the Smithsonian Institution, who was born in Paris the illegitimate son of the Duke of Northumberland, was born in the Pentemont Abbey, as it had strong connections to the Duke, whose illegitimate daughters it educated. [18]

State Property (1790–2015)

A grenadier of the Imperial Guard, which was headquartered at Pentemont Abbey Grenadier-a-pied-de-la-Vieille-Garde.png
A grenadier of the Imperial Guard, which was headquartered at Pentemont Abbey

Military

During the French Revolution, the Abbey was suppressed and its properties confiscated. The abbey's affairs were wound down in 1791-2, with its properties in Beauvais sold to pay off state debt. [19] With the abbey now state property it came to serve first as home to the National Guard, then the Imperial Guard. [20] In 1835, the building was expanded to Rue de Bellechasse which required the demolition of some parts of the original structure. Under the Second Empire the abbey served as the barracks of the Cent-gardes Squadron, an elite cavalry unit that provided personal protection for Napoleon III and the Tuileries Palace. [21]

In the twentieth century, Pentemont Abbey housed the Ministry of War Pensions, Bonuses and Benefits. In 1937, a bunker was constructed underneath the Court of Honor including two stationary bicycles intended to provide electricity in case of power loss due to enemy bombardment. [22] The courtyard has a war memorial that reads "From veterans to their comrades who gave their lives for their country. In memoriam." It is also home to a number of commemorative plaques, including ones for André Maginot and Henri Frenay. [23]

Protestant Church

The chapel was used to store grain during the Revolution and later hay when the army took over the abbey. After the Concordat of 1801 provided formal recognition of the Reformed Church in France, it was decided that three former Catholic churches in Paris be turned over to Reformed congregations, Saint-Louis-du-Louvre, Sainte-Marie-des-Anges, and the chapel of the Pentemont Abbey.

In 1598, Protestant worship had been forbidden in Paris by the Edict of Nantes. In 1685, the Edict of Fontainebleau made non-Catholic services illegal in all of France. [24] This inaugurated a long period of persecution for French Protestants though some in Paris were able to worship in the chapels of the Dutch and Swedish embassies. [25] The handover of the chapel of the abbey as well as the other churches ushered in a new era of open Protestant worship in Paris.

The actual opening of the former abbey as a Reformed congregation was delayed by decades of bureaucratic obstacles as well as opposition during the Bourbon Restoration to turning over a former Catholic building to Protestant use. [26] It was not until 1844 that architect Victor Baltard began work to convert the chapel into a Protestant church. He isolated the chapel from the rest of the building, added new doors in place of two of the previous windows, and converted the former choir to a nave. [27] He also closed off the original entrance by adding a massive organ, built by Aristide Cavaillé-Coll and installed in 1846 for the opening of the church. [28] The organ has undergone various modifications over the years including a restoration from 2011-14 to restore the remaining original elements. [29] The church itself underwent restoration from 2005-2007 commissioned by the City of Paris and accomplished by Benjamin Mouton, the chief architect of historic monuments, and the firm Aubert-Labansat. [30]

List of Abbesses of Pentemont

Source: Le Fèvre, A.M. (1747). Calendrier historique et chronologique de l'Église de Paris. Paris, C. Herissant fils.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Montmartre</span> Large hill in Pariss northern 18th arrondissement

Montmartre is a large hill in Paris's northern 18th arrondissement. It is 130 m (430 ft) high and gives its name to the surrounding district, part of the Right Bank. Montmartre is primarily known for its artistic history, for the white-domed Basilica of the Sacré-Cœur on its summit, and as a nightclub district.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abbey of the Paraclete</span>

The Abbey of the Paraclete was a Benedictine monastery founded by Peter Abelard in Ferreux-Quincey, France, after he left the Abbey of St. Denis about 1121. Paraclete comes from the Greek word meaning "one who consoles" and is found in the Gospel of John (16:7) as a name for the Holy Spirit.

Faremoutiers Abbey was an important Merovingian Benedictine nunnery in the present Seine-et-Marne department of France. It formed an important link between the Merovingian Frankish Empire and the southern Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Kent and East Anglia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">La Cambre Abbey</span> Former abbey in Brussels, Belgium

La Cambre Abbey or Ter Kameren Abbey is a former Cistercian abbey in the City of Brussels, Belgium. It is located in the Maelbeek valley between the Bois de la Cambre/Ter Kamerenbos and the Ixelles Ponds. The abbey church is a Catholic parish of the Archdiocese of Mechelen–Brussels and home to a community of Norbertine canons, while other parts of the monastery house the headquarters of the Belgian National Geographic Institute (NGI) and La Cambre, a prestigious visual arts school.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chelles Abbey</span> Frankish monastery

Chelles Abbey was a Frankish monastery founded around 657/660 during the early medieval period. It was intended initially as a monastery for women; then its reputation for great learning grew, and when men wanted to follow the monastic life, a parallel male community was established, creating a double monastery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Louise de Polastron</span> French noblewoman

Marie Louise d’Esparbès de Lussan, by marriage vicomtesse then comtesse de Polastron was a French lady-in-waiting, known as the mistress of the comte d’Artois, who later reigned as Charles X of France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Louise Adélaïde de Bourbon (1757–1824)</span> French royal; daughter of Louis Joseph, Prince of Condé

Louise Adélaïde de Bourbon was a French nun. She was the last Remiremont abbess and founded at the beginning of the Bourbon Restoration a religious community that became famous among French Catholics under the name of Bénédictines de la rue Monsieur. She constructed the Hôtel de Mademoiselle de Condé, named after her.

<i>Bazar de la Charité</i> 1897 Paris fire

The Bazar de la Charité was an annual charity event orchestrated by the French Catholic aristocracy in Paris beginning in 1885, when it was first organised by Englishman Henry Blount, the son of banker Sir Edward Blount, a financier of railway enterprises in France. The Bazar was held in a variety of locations by a consortium of charitable organisations that shared renting fees, acting to reduce costs and group potential buyers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maubuisson Abbey</span> Former abbey and royal palace in France

Maubuisson Abbey is a Cistercian nunnery at Saint-Ouen-l'Aumône, in the Val-d'Oise department of France. It was founded in A.D. 1236 by Blanche of Castile, Queen of France, who may have been buried there in 1252. The site is now within the north-western suburbs of Paris. The surviving buildings are listed as a monument historique.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Saint-Yved de Braine</span>

Saint-Yved is a church in Braine, Aisne in which the Counts of Dreux are buried. It was dedicated to Saint Yved, whose relics were brought to Braine (Braisne) in the ninth century. Originally a chapter of secular canons, the Braine Abbey was given to the Premonstratensian order by the Bishop of Soissons in 1130.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Temple du Marais</span> Church in Paris, France

The Temple du Marais, sometimes known as the Temple Sainte-Marie, or historically, as the Church of Sainte Marie de la Visitation, is a Protestant church located in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, in the district of Le Marais at 17 Rue Saint-Antoine. It was originally built as a Roman Catholic convent by the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary, whose sisters were commonly called the Visitandines. The church was closed in the French Revolution and later given to a Protestant congregation which continues its ministry to the present. The closest métro station is Bastille

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abbey of Notre Dame aux Nonnains</span>

The Abbey of Notre Dame aux Nonnains, also called the Royal Abbey of Our Lady of Troyes, was a convent founded before the 7th century in Troyes, France. The non-cloistered canonesses became wealthy and powerful in the Middle Ages. In 1266–68 they defied the pope and used force to delay construction of the collegiate Church of St Urbain. They were excommunicated as a result. Later the abbey adopted a strictly cloistered rule and the nuns became impoverished. Work started on building a new convent in 1778 but was only partially completed before the French Revolution (1789–99). The abbey was closed in 1792 and the church was demolished. The convent became the seat of the prefecture of Aube.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rue du Tapis-Vert</span> Street in Marseille, France

Rue du Tapis-Vert is a street located in the 1st arrondissement of Marseille. The street contains the 17th century Église de la Mission de France church.

Preuilly Abbey was a Benedictine monastery in Preuilly-sur-Claise, Indre-et-Loire, France. The surviving abbey church retains many Romanesque features, notably the intricately carved capitals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Montivilliers Abbey</span>

Montivilliers Abbey is a former Benedictine nunnery, founded between 682 and 684 by Saint Philibert in the town of Montivilliers in Normandy, in the present department of Seine-Maritime, France. It was suppressed during the French Revolution, but many buildings, including the church, have survived.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abbey of St Caesarius, Arles</span> Abbey in Arles, France

The Abbey of St Caesarius, at first called the abbey or monastery of St John, was a nunnery in the city of Arles in the south-eastern corner of the rampart. It was founded in 512 AD by Saint Caesarius of Arles, after whom it is now named. The abbey was suppressed in the French Revolution. Those that remained of the buildings were later used as a hospice; they are now adandoned.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abbey of La Joie-Notre-Dame</span> Cistercian abbey in Hennebont

La Joie Abbey, also the Abbey of La Joie-Notre-Dame, is a former Cistercian abbey on the territory of Hennebont. It was part of the diocese of Vannes. Today, it is the site of the national stud farm.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abbey of Saint-Pierre-les-Nonnains</span> St. Peters Palace

The Abbey of Saint-Pierre-les-Nonnains in Lyon, also known as the Abbey of the Dames de Saint-Pierre or simply Palais Saint-Pierre, is an ancient Catholic religious edifice that housed Benedictine nuns from the 10th century onwards, and was rebuilt in the 17th century. Closed during the French Revolution, the former abbey is now home to the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon.

References

  1. Graves, Louis (1855). Précis statistique sur le canton de Beauvais, arrondissement de Beauvais (Oise). p. 192.
  2. Base Mérimée: PA00088671, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  3. "Penthemont : un ensemble immobilier d'exception". Le portail des ministères économiques et financiers. Ministère de l'Économie, de l'Industrie et du Numérique.
  4. "L'Etat a vendu l'ensemble Penthemont dans le 7e". LaVieImmo.com.
  5. Delettre, Abbé (1843). Histoire du Diocèse de Beauvais, depuis son établissement au 3me siècle jusqu'au 2 septembre 1792, Second Volume. Beauvais: Desjardins. p. 237.
  6. Woshinsky, Barbara R. (2010). Imagining Women's Conventual Spaces in France, 1600–1800: The Cloister Disclosed. Ashgate Publishing. p. 165. ISBN   9780754667544.
  7. Deladreue, Abbé E. (1867). Histoire de l'abbaye royale de Notre-Dame de Saint-Paul lès Beauvais de l'ordre de Saint-Benoit. Victor Pineau. p. 91.
  8. Bachmann, Kerstin (16 June 2014). "A French real estate investment trust has acquired the Abbaye de Penthemont from the French State". Parispropertygroup.com.
  9. "Mémoires". Société académique d'archéologie, sciences et arts du département de l'Oise, Beauvais. 14 (2): 353. 1890.
  10. D'Arjuzon, La Comtesse C. (1906). "Joséphine contre Beauharnais". Société d'histoire contemporaine (Seizième Assemblée générale ed.): 21.
  11. Woshinsky, Barbara R. (2010). Imagining Women's Conventual Spaces in France, 1600-1800: The Cloister Disclosed. Ashgate Publishing. p. 165. ISBN   9780754667544.
  12. Louis Chaigne, Les Bénédictines de la rue Monsieur, F.-X. Le Roux editions, Strasbourg-Paris, 1950, p. 13 sqq
  13. Bertaut, Jules (1953). Les belles emigrées: la comtesse de Polastron, Madame de Flahaut, la comtesse de Balbi, la marquise de la Tour du Pin, la princesse Louise de Bourbon-Condé. Club du meilleur livre. p. 36.
  14. "Making of America Project". The Atlantic. 62: 797. 1888.
  15. Wead, Doug (2004). All the Presidents' Children: Triumph and Tragedy in the Lives of America's First Families. Simon and Schuster. pp. 127–129. ISBN   9780743446334.
  16. D'Arjuzon, La Comtesse C. (1906). "Joséphine contre Beauharnais". Société d'histoire contemporaine (Seizième Assemblée générale ed.): 21.
  17. Erickson, Carolly (2000). Josephine: A Life of the Empress. Macmillan. pp. 55–57. ISBN   9781429904018.
  18. Ewing, Heather (2010). The Lost World of James Smithson: Science, Revolution and the Birth of the Smithsonian. A&C Black. p. Acknowledgements, Note 35. ISBN   9781408820759.
  19. Tuetay, Alexandre (1905). Répertoire général des sources manuscrites de l'histoire de Paris pendant la rěvolution franȧise, vol. 7-8. Imprimerie nouvelle. pp. 54–58.
  20. Mekachera, Hamlaoui (2013). Un seul coeur, un seul drapeau: De l'école des enfants de troupe au ministère des Anciens Combattants. Editions L'Harmattan. p. 123. ISBN   9782336327624.
  21. "L'Abbaye de Pentemont". Actualités. Ministère de la Défense.
  22. Fourt, Olivier (18 September 2011). "LIGNES DE DÉFENSE Patrimoine militaire français, un bunker en plein Paris". Les Voix du Monde.
  23. "Pentemont Abbey". Chemins de Memoire. Ministère de la Défense.
  24. "Charenton (Val-de-Marne)". Musée virtuel du Protestantisme.
  25. "Temples in Paris: Catholic churches and other places devoted to Protestant worship after the Concordat in 1801". Musée virtuel du Protestantisme.
  26. Paris guide par les principaux écrivains et artistes de la France. Paris: A. Lacroix , Verboeckhoven. 1867. p.  766.
  27. Marchand, Gilles (2003). Dictionnaire des monuments de Paris. Editions Jean-paul Gisserot. p. 162. ISBN   9782877477222.
  28. Huybens, Giblert (1985). Cavaillé-Coll: Liste des travaux exécutés/Werkverzeichnis. Lauffen/Neckar: Orgelbau-Fachverlag Rensch. ISBN   3-921848-12-1.
  29. "Temple Pentemont". Organs of Paris.
  30. "Temple de Pentemont". Les ateliers Aubert-Labansat.

Bibliography