Église Sainte-Marthe de Tarascon

Église Sainte-Marthe de Tarascon or Collégiale Royale Sainte-Marthe is a collegiate church in Tarascon, France, dedicated to Saint Martha. It is where, according to a local tradition, the biblical figure Martha is buried.

Église Sainte-Marthe de Tarascon
Romanesque southern portal
Church interior
Sarcophagus of Saint Martha

History

Collegiate Sainte-Marthe was dedicated in 1197 and enlarged in the 14th and 15th centuries. It was built half-Romanesque in the 12th century and half-Gothic in the 14th century.

The tympanum and lintel of the Romanesque southern portal were severely damaged during the French Revolution.

The tip of the church tower was destroyed during Allied bombings on August 16, 1944. It was later rebuilt.

Features

The crypt dates from the 3rd century. It houses the relics of Martha in a sarcophagus of the 4th century.

Church paintings include:

Painting by Jean-Baptiste van Loo:

  • Sainte Marthe domptant la Tarasque (1730). Originally in the convent of the Capuchins and later in Eglise Saint-Jacques.

Paintings by Joseph-Marie Vien. Based on the narrative of the Golden Legend, they were initially part of a series painted for the convent of the Capuchins in Tarascon.[1][2]

  • Sainte Marthe recevant le Christ à Bethanie (1747)[3]
  • La résurrection de Lazare (1747)[4]
  • L'embarquement de sainte Marthe (1751)[5]
  • L'arrivée de sainte Marthe en Provence (1748)[6]
  • La prédication de sainte Marthe (1748)[7]
  • L'agonie de sainte Marthe (1748)[8]
  • Les funérailles de sainte Marthe (1748)[9]

Paintings by Nicolas Mignard:

  • L'Assomption (1643)[10]
  • Arrivée du Christ à Béthanie (1640)[11]

Paintings by Pierre Parrocel:

  • Sainte Cunégonde et sainte Cécile[12]
  • Sainte Marie l'égyptienne[13]
  • Le Christ sur la croix[14]
  • Sainte Catherine de Sienne[15]
  • Saint Thomas d'Aquin[15]
  • Adoration des Mages[16]
  • Adoration des Bergers[17]
  • L'Annonciation[18]
  • Notre Dame du peuple[19]

Painting by Philippe Sauvan:

  • Saint Dominique (1789) [20]

References

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