[{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BlogPosting","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/christianity-in-vesoul-wikipedia\/#BlogPosting","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/christianity-in-vesoul-wikipedia\/","headline":"Christianity in Vesoul – Wikipedia","name":"Christianity in Vesoul – Wikipedia","description":"before-content-x4 The Christianity in Vesoul Start during the XI It is Century with the establishment of the Saint-Nicolas priory of","datePublished":"2020-04-01","dateModified":"2020-04-01","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/author\/lordneo\/#Person","name":"lordneo","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/author\/lordneo\/","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/44a4cee54c4c053e967fe3e7d054edd4?s=96&d=mm&r=g","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/44a4cee54c4c053e967fe3e7d054edd4?s=96&d=mm&r=g","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":600,"height":60}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/9\/98\/Vesoul_%C3%89glise_du_Sacr%C3%A9-Coeur_3.jpg\/220px-Vesoul_%C3%89glise_du_Sacr%C3%A9-Coeur_3.jpg","url":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/9\/98\/Vesoul_%C3%89glise_du_Sacr%C3%A9-Coeur_3.jpg\/220px-Vesoul_%C3%89glise_du_Sacr%C3%A9-Coeur_3.jpg","height":"147","width":"220"},"url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/christianity-in-vesoul-wikipedia\/","wordCount":4071,"articleBody":" (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});before-content-x4 The Christianity in Vesoul Start during the XI It is Century with the establishment of the Saint-Nicolas priory of Marteroy, in 1092. The priory of Marteroy was founded by Gislebert I of Faucogney, viscount of Vesoul near an ancient cemetery. Over the centuries, the city founded many places of worship, such as churches, convents, chapels, oratories, temples … to serve all of its believing and practicing population. The city welcomed many Christian personalities from the diocese such as Cardinal Mathieu, Cardinal Gousset during the famous Congress and Religious Procession of Notre-Dame-de-la-Motte. The parish church has also known vicars like \u00c9mile-Charles-Raymond Pirolley, Jean-Joseph Gaume and Maurice-Louis Dubourg. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4It was also the siege of the ecclesiastical district of the diocese of Vesoul. Table of Contents (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4Middle Ages [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Modern times [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Contemporary period [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Catholic [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Protestant [ modifier | Modifier and code ] J\u00e9hovah [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Catholic community [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Deanery parishes [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Catholic education [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Protestant community [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Jehovah’s witnesses [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Religious personalities born in Vesoul [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Priests and priests of Vesoul [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Middle Ages [ modifier | Modifier and code ] At XII It is century, the first provost of Vesoul, Lambert de Montbozon, was declared in an act of 1188. According to feudal tradition, the profession of provost was hereditary and given in possession to its owner [ first ] . In the following century, this noble family which was subvented at the Pr\u00e9vot took the family name of Vesoul. The first place where worship was practiced was the Marteroy church. It was Gislebert I of Faucogney, Viscount of Vesoul who founded the priory of the Marteroy, in 1092. However it was at XIII It is century that this church took off a departmental notoriety with the generous donations of the famous bourgeois and nobles of the county. It is then that multiple exchanges of possession are made for the good of the Church. The era of development of the church was from 1270 to 1286. A plot of vine was generously given, by Jacques Mignottin, in 1270. A year later, Jacques Dilliez sold in Saint-Nicolas, the prior of the church, Villeparois royalties. It is the turn of Maclet de Traps to enrich the Church by its own means, giving a lot of object of worship to the church in 1273. In its will, the provost Hugues de Vesoul chooses its burial of the Church of the Priory of Marteroy [ 2 ] . Modern times [ modifier | Modifier and code ] This period of modern times will mark an ecclesiastical evolution in Vesoul. The start of XVII It is century was a particularly intense moment of religious fervor and saw the construction of four important convents. In 1602, the Capuchins of Vesoul wanted to found a convent in the city. The magistrate accepted their proposals on September 11, 1604. Construction officially starts on April 30, 1605, in the presence of the parish priest of Vesoul, RenoBert DEMESMAY. The elevation of the church was carried out by the suffragant de Besan\u00e7on, Guillaume Simonin, on July 7, 1611. The convent foundation begins with the aid of two famous bourgeois of the city, Claude Besancenot and Melchior Mercier. The building and the seminar is then built in the east of the city, on a mound on the site of a vine place (on the site of the old Paul-Morel Hospital in Vesoul). At the other end of the city, the Jesuits founded the Jesuit college there (current G\u00e9r\u00f4me college). In 1603, the Magistrate of Vesoul wrote to the provincial of Pont-\u00e0-Mousson to propose the foundation of a college comprising four classes. On September 23, 1610, the college opened. The many bourgeois of Vesoul had long wanted this Jesuit institute, to put their children there. At the beginning of XVII It is century, there are therefore two religious schools which open in Vesoul. On the one hand of the city, to the east, the Capuchin convent, and on the other hand, in the west, the Jesuit college. A third religious school will appear during this century in Vesoul, the Annunciades convent. The magistrate authorized the construction by deliberation there on August 21, 1610. It was founded on the initiative of Fran\u00e7oise Carmentrand, Adrienne Lavey and Catherine Rousselet. Later the convent becomes the school of the girls there. In 1645, Louis XV helped them by protecting them from people of war. On November 20, 1615, it was then that a fourth convent opened in the city, the convent of the Ursulines of Vesoul. The convent was then founded by Anne de Xainctonge, during the year 1615, and a chapel was built there on December 12, 1632, by Philippe Patornay, and there will later be the use of a performance hall. The convent is also the subject of an inscription under the historical monuments. The Ursuline Convent will later become the school of the boys [ 3 ] Contemporary period [ modifier | Modifier and code ] The diocese of Vesoul is an ecclesiastical district of Vesoul. The diocese was created in 1791, within the framework of the territorial reorganization of the Church linked to the Civil Constitution of the Clergy. The diocese experienced a single bishop, it is Jean-Baptiste Flavigny, who was also the former parish priest of Vesoul. The 1801 concordat deleted the diocese. It brought together multiple parishes of Haute-Sa\u00f4ne.The main Christian places of worship are in the old center. However, we find a church outside the city center, founded during the modern era. The church of the Sacred Heart of Vesoul is located in the Jean Jaur\u00e8s-Petit-Banque district, the southern district of Vesoul. It is a church with a very common, but remarkable architecture. It is located behind the boulevard school and brings a lot of harmony in the neighborhood. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4We find in different places in the city, other churches, such as in the Street district, not far from the Montmarin district. Despite, the strong Muslim population possessed by these two districts, the Saint-Joseph presbytery was created to ensure the continuity of Christian worship in the sector. Today, the city is attached to the archdiocese of Besan\u00e7on. Vesoul is the seat of the pastoral unit of Notre-Dame-de-la-Motte [ 4 ] , which belongs to the deanery of Vesoul plateaus [ 5 ] . Catholic [ modifier | Modifier and code ] The Saint-Georges church is the oldest Catholic church in the old district of Vesoul. Formerly, his name was Saint-Georges cathedral . The church was built from 1735 to 1745 by architects Mathieu Duchesne and P. Archange. It is the seat of the chapter of Calmoutier since 1649. The church has throughout the old regime the function of collegiate church and has a chapter of nine canons. It has been registered and classified as a historic monument since 1993. Renovations were made in 2007. The Sacr\u00e9-Coeur church is a Catholic church located 17 rue Jules Ferry in the Jean Jaur\u00e8s-Petit-Banque district. The building is located behind the boulevard school and next to the old Cinema Club . It has a common but remarkable architecture. These different ornaments make her a special monument, which greatly harmonizes the neighborhood. The Saint-Joseph church is a Catholic church in a modern style, very bright, located 1 rue de la P\u00e9pini\u00e8re, in the D\u00e9rpes district. It allows the believer of the neighborhood to practice worship in all serenity and modernity [ 6 ] . The Notre-Dame-de-la-Motte chapel is the best known place of worship in Vesoul. It is located on the Motte hill top. The chapel has a long history since its foundation. It is at the very location of the old castle castrum vesulium. The sanctuary and the path that allows you to access it is a place of pilgrimage. Saint-Maur is both an old Christian school and the name of the chapel of the building. It was founded at XIX It is century by Cardinal Mathieu. It was a school reserved for girls. The Institute was led by the sisters of the Holy Enfant-Jesus called “Ladies of Saint-Maur”. The school is then annexed with two other private V\u00e9suliennes schools, Saint-Georges and Saint-Vincent, to form the college of Marteroy. Louise de Coligny-Ch\u00e2tillon, the Muse of Guillaume Apollinaire was a student in this institute. Protestant [ modifier | Modifier and code ] The Protestant temple of Vesoul is the oldest location of the city. He was founded by Louis Tournier on August 18, 1841. His friends also participated in the Temple Foundation. Among them are the watchmaker Henri Ducommun and the pastry chef Adam Perle [ 7 ] . The Protestant evangelical church is a church in the evangelical center of Vesoul. It has existed since 1977 and was created by Pastor Christian Ardoin. Since that time, the church has been a place of reception and sharing. The Evangelical Center is a place where you get to know the Gospel and a gathering place open to all, where many events take place [ 8 ] . J\u00e9hovah [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Vesoul has a place of worship for this community. The Kingdom hall is located on rue du Grand Chanois, in the D\u00e9rpes district. Catholic community [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Deanery parishes [ modifier | Modifier and code ] The Vesoul plateau is the set of pastoral units surrounding Vesoul. The deanery is made up of 7 pastoral units [ 9 ] : Notre Dame de la Motte -Vesoul (22 municipalities – 33,250 inhabitants) Val de l’Ognon and Linotte (25 municipalities – 4,346 inhabitants) Riolean countries (27 municipalities – 8,406 inhabitants) Noroy Le Bourg (18 municipalities – 4,227 inhabitants) SCEY – Val de Sa\u00f4ne (28 municipalities – 9,225 inhabitants) Saulx (15 municipalities – 3,349 inhabitants) MAILLEY – VELLEFAUX (11 municipalities – 3,095 inhabitants) Catholic education [ modifier | Modifier and code ] The city has a private Catholic school: the private school group of Marteroy. Protestant community [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Jehovah’s witnesses [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Religious personalities born in Vesoul [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Priests and priests of Vesoul [ modifier | Modifier and code ] During the inauguration of the Notre-Dame-de-la-Motte chapel, on August 9, 1857, the day of the great Vesoul procession, rite promises and beliefs were brought. These promises were announced because it seemed to very important religions to pay tribute to the Virgin Mary for having spared them from cholera. The assumption fell six days after the inauguration. On August 15, 1857, a procession took place at La Motte. This procession was necessarily carried out for religious but even for the inhabitants of Vesoul. The promises held during the great Vesoul procession say that each V\u00e9sulien must go at least once in the year on Sunday closest to July 30, or on the day of the Assumption, at the Motte chapel to return Tribute to Marie. Today, this tradition is always respected by the Vesulians, who have this day of the Assumption today [ ten ] . \u2191 ‘ The XII It is century in Vesoul \u00bb , on http:\/\/net70.info\/ (consulted the November 3, 2012 ) . \u2191 History of Vesoul, Part 1, Book I, Chapter VI, p. 49 : de Alfred Gevrey, 1865 \u2191 ‘ Vesoul at XVII It is century, on page 13-14-15 \u00bb , on A book reading site (consulted the December 10, 2012 ) . \u2191 ‘ Pastoral unit Notre Dame de la Motte – Vesoul \u00bb , on The site of the diocese of Besan\u00e7on (consulted the May 7, 2014 ) . \u2191 ‘ Deanery of Vesoul plateaus \u00bb , on The site of the diocese of Besan\u00e7on (consulted the May 7, 2014 ) . \u2191 ‘ Saint-Joseph church \u00bb , on http:\/\/clochers.org\/ (consulted the December 14, 2012 ) . \u2191 ‘ Temple protestant \u00bb , on http:\/\/clochers.org\/ (consulted the December 14, 2012 ) . \u2191 ‘ Evangelical Center of Vesoul \u00bb , on http:\/\/www.c-e-v.fr\/ (consulted the December 14, 2012 ) . \u2191 ‘ Pastoral units of the deanery of Vesoul plateaus \u00bb , on The site of the diocese of Besan\u00e7on (consulted the July 10, 2014 ) . \u2191 Notre-Dame-de-la-Motte: Historical Notice on the Sanctuary and the Pilgrimage, Part 1, p. 23-24 : from J.C. Boilloz, 1860 (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4"},{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/christianity-in-vesoul-wikipedia\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Christianity in Vesoul – Wikipedia"}}]}]