- La Vieille Charité
La vieille charité is a former
almshouse , now functioning as amuseum and cultural centre, situated in the heart of the old Panier quarter ofMarseille in the south ofFrance . Constructed between 1671 and 1749 in theBaroque style to the designs of the architectPierre Puget , it comprises four ranges of arcaded galleries in three storeys surrounding a space with a central chapel surmounted by anovoid dome.Construction
The idea of an almshouse for the poor, dedicated to "Notre-Dame, mère de Charité" (Our Lady, Mother of Charity), was originally conceived in 1622; but it was not until 1640 that a suitable plot of land was acquired, with the first pensioners admitted in the following year. [ Duchêne & Contrucci (1998), page 371.] Although the foundation stone was laid in that year, construction commenced only in 1671, following a grand plan of the architect
Pierre Puget . It was not completed until 1749, construction being prolonged as the result of reductions to the project imposed by the aldermen of Marseille. The central chapel was erected between 1679 and 1704, although Puget died before its completion.Architecture
The main body of the structure is a rectangle, 112m by 96m, composed of four walls in pink and yellow-tinted
molasse stone from the ancient quarries at Cap Couronne, with no outward facing windows. On the inside are three arcaded galleries superposed on each other, opening onto an interior courtyard measuring 82m by 45m. In the centre of the courtyard is a harmonious chapel, around church , crowned by anellipsoid al dome and fronted by aportico in theclassical style withCorinthian columns . This Baroque chapel ranks as one of Puget's most original designs.Historic use
In the seventeenth century the repression of beggars was conducted with great brutality in France. Guards called "Chasse-gueux" ("beggar-hunters") had the task of rounding up beggars: non-residents among them were expelled from Marseille, and natives of Marseille were shut up in prison. Often the crowd would take the side of the beggars during such arrests.
The almshouses served as
workhouse s for the beggars. Children were found jobs asdomestic servant s,cabin boy s orapprentice s withseamstress es orbaker s. As time passed the work of la Vielle Charité grew, the number of inmates increasing from 850 in 1736 to 1059 in 1760. As the imprisonment of the poor became less acceptable, the numbers decreased to 250 in 1781.Spared during the
French Revolution , the building was used as an asylum for "les vagabonds et les gens sans aveu" (vagrants and the dispossessed) in the nineteenth century. It was transformed into a barracks for theFrench Foreign Legion until 1922, when it was used to lodge those displaced by the demolition of the district behind the Bourse and later those made homeless by the dynamiting of the Old Port during the Second World War. Plagued by squatters, pillagers and vandals, it eventually housed 146 families living in squalid and unsafe conditions, a group of around 30Little Sisters of Jesus living in equally abject conditions to their charges, and various small concerns, devoted amongst other things to transport, packing of anchovies and ripening of bananas. In 1962 all the residents were rehoused and the building shut down. It was only in 1968, thanks to the intervention of the Minister of CultureAndré Malraux , that funds became available to rescue the buildings, by then in a state of total dereliction. La Vieille Charité was painstakingly restored to its former glory between 1970 and 1986, restoration of the chapel being completed in 1981. [Duchêne & Contrucci (1998), pages 735-736.]Current use
La Vieille Charité houses a number of different cultural and educational resources:
* The Museum of Mediterranean Archaeology, on the first floor, covering oriental and classical antiquities, as well as local Celto-Ligurian archaeology.
* The Museum of Art of Africa, Oceania and Amerindia, on the second floor, containing a unusually collection of artefacts, including masks from Mexico and West Africa and a unique collection of engraved human skulls and trophy heads from South America.
* A research library specialising in archaeological documents.
* A school of advanced studies in the social sciences (EHESS).
* Offices of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.
* On the ground level there are special temporary exhibitions as well as a number of museum shops.
Notes
References
*Roger Duchêne and Jean Contrucci, "Marseille - 2600 ans d'histoire", Éditions Fayard (1998) ISBN 2-213-60197-6
*André Bouyala d’Arnaud, "Evocation du vieux Marseille", Les éditions de minuit, Paris, 1961, pages 193-195.
*André Bouyala d’Arnaud, André Hardy, Jean-Jacques Gloton, Jean Sonnier, Félix-L. Tavernier, "La vieille Charité de Marseille", Arts et livres de Provence, 75 (1970), 202 pages.
*"Provence", Guide Vert, Michelin (1998), ISBN 2-06-137503-0
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