posted on 2017-06-30, 00:00authored byG. Massiot & cie
The complex is located in the Alps at an altitude of 4268 feet.\u000a\u000aThe Order took its name from that of the mountainous site of the mother house at La Grande Chartreuse in the diocese of Grenoble (Is\u00E8re). The Order has never been reformed; such continuity over more than 900 years is unique. The way of life of the first Carthusians, characterized by total dedication to contemplation through silence, assiduous prayer, poverty, penance and almost continuous occupancy of a solitary cell, impressed contemporaries with its novelty. The Carthusian vision could not have been realized without the conversi to perform such specialist tasks as agriculture and tending flocks, which allowed for the survival of the group under the harshest conditions and protected the monks from all temporal concerns. The conversi, who inhabited a separate building (the Lower House at La Grande Chartreuse) also had individual cells and took the same vows as the monks. The current building complex is a restoration of a version constructed in the late 17th century.
History
Date Created
1910-01-01
Date Modified
2017-06-30
Spatial Coverage
Saint-Pierre-de-Grande-Chartreuse
Grande Chartreuse Couvent de la (Saint-Pierre-de-Grande-Chartreuse, Rhône-Alpes, France): Alps of Dauphine near Grenoble (Isère Department)
+45.363333+5.793611
Temporal Coverage
before or circa 1910
Cultural Context
['Seventeenth century', 'Medieval']
Rights Statement
To view the physical lantern slide, please contact the Architecture Library.