In 1610, two sisters of the
Discalced Carmelites (so-called because they wore sandals as a symbol of their vow of poverty) traveled from Rome to Paris to found a convent. It was a period of great religious fervour in France; seventy-seven new churches and other religious establishments were created between 1600 and 1670 in Paris alone. In 1613, the first stone of the new church was laid by the Queen-Regent
Marie de Médicis, whose residence in the
Luxembourg Palace was not far away. The exterior of the church was largely completed by 1620, so decoration of the interior could begin. The first mass was celebrated in that year on 19 March, the Day of
Saint Joseph. The church was consecrated on 21 December 1625 by Leonor d'Étampes de Valencay, Bishop of Chartres and close collaborator with
Cardinal Richelieu. it was the first church in Paris dedicated to that saint, to whom the Carmelites, led by
Teresa of Ávila, expressed a particular devotion. At the same time that the church was constructed, the adjoining convent of the Discalced Carmelites was built. It was composed of two cloisters, a smaller cloister for those coming from outside the convent and a larger one for those resident. It contained a refractory, cells for the sisters, a capitulary hall and a hall for novices. It could house between forty and sixty novices. This structure is almost entirely intact today, and was used by the seminary. A men's community of Carmelites was also located on the property. One famous resident was
Brother Lawrence of the Resurrection, whose writings later became part of the classic Christian text,
The Practice of the Presence of God. St.
Jean-Baptiste de La Salle famously made a retreat at the monastery as well, having had a particular devotion to St. Teresa.
French Revolution – the September Massacres In 1789, after the outbreak of the
French Revolution, the new revolutionary National Assembly voted to nationalise the property of the church and clergy. The
Civil Constitution of the Clergy was adopted on 12 July 1790, setting up a system for electing priests and bishops and imposing punishments, including a possible a death sentence, on priests who refused to swear allegiance to it. Some 126 of 130 bishops and 100,000 out of 130,000 priests refused to swear to it, and on 27 May 1792 a decree of the
Legislative Assembly ordered them deported. Those who refused, called
refractaires, became a target of the new government. About one thousand of them were arrested and imprisoned in several sites, including Saint-Joseph-des-Carmes. On 2 September 1792, rumours reached Paris that a Prussian Army was approaching the city to rescue the king. The Revolutionary leader
Georges Danton called on the
sans culottes to put to death anyone who did not take up arms against the Prussians. The event known as the
September Massacres ensued, taking the lives of some 1400 victims, including 223 priests, between 2 and 4 September. The largest number of priests, 115, were killed at Saint-Joseph-des-Carmes. Among the dead where
Solomon Leclercq and
Jacques Jules Bonnaud. They were given a last chance to take the oath to the government, then taken down the stairs to the garden before the crowd of Sans-Culottes, who were armed with axes, pikes and swords. Over the course of two hours, one hundred fifteen priests, a layman, and a religious were killed by the mob.
Jean Marie du Lau d'Allemans (Archbishop of Arles), his vicar general
Armand de Foucauld de Pontbriand, (bishop of Beauvais) and his brother (bishop of Saintes) were shut up in the monastery church and between 2 and 5 September all three of them were killed in the monastery garden along with the priests
André Grasset,
Ambroise Chevreux, and
Joseph-Marie Gros. The stairway is now called the Stairway of Martyrs. Those killed included the Bishops of
Arles,
Beauvais and
Saintes, Charente-Maritime. The monastery's household silver and library were seized and the community was forced to leave the monastery building, which was turned into a prison. 188 priests and three bishops were massacred in particularly violent conditions under commissioner
Stanislas-Marie Maillard, who executed orders from the surveillance committee. At the
Abbaye Prison the violence lasted until the end of the morning of 4 September, with 21 priests and 151 others killed out of a total of 29 priests and 209 other prisoners – at Carmes it only ended at 6pm, with 116 killed out of between 162 and 172 prisoners. All the monks who refused to take the oath before the tribunal at the prison were bayoneted or impaled on pikes on the threshold. The massacre at Carmes lasted all night. The church continued to serve as a prison (
Carmes Prison; French -
prison des Carmes) until the end of the Revolution, and was the scene of a second massacre. On July 23, 1794, a group of forty-nine aristocrats, accused of conspiracy, were executed. They included the Count of Soyecourt, and
Alexandre de Beauharnais, the first husband of
Empress Joséphine, Josephine herself was also held prisoner there, but survived to become the wife of Napoleon Bonaparte, In 1797 a Carmelite supporter,
Madamoiselle de Soyecourt, bought the abandoned church and cloister and made it the home of a community of Carmelite sisters. One of the cells from this period has been preserved and can ve visited.
Later years In 1841 the buildings were purchased by the Archbishop of Paris for use as a higher school of ecclesiastical studies. In 1845 the Carmelite sisters departed, In 1851 the church took on the function of a parish church. In 1867 the Dominican monks also departed. In 1875 it became the home of the Catholic University of Paris, which was in 1880 was renamed formally the
Catholic Institute of Paris. The church is now used by the Seminary, but is also a parish church for the neighbourhood. In 1867, during the construction of Rue de Rennes, the graves of the priests massacred at the church in 1792 were discovered. The remains were transferred to the church and placed in Crypt of Martyrs, which was dedicated in 1868. The land occupied by the church and Institute today is less than half of the original land of convent and church. It was reduced by the construction of a new street, rue d'Assas, in 1798, and by a new boulevard built by Napoleon III, the Rue de Rennes, in 1866. In the 18th century, the Carmelites found a new source of income in building private houses for rental along Rue du Regard. Some of these houses, at 1,5 and 13 rue du Regard, still exist. File:Paris Wellcome V0049975EB.jpg|The Convent and church in the 1670s, with Louvre in background File:Carmes de Vaugirard.jpg|The chapel in 1817 == Exterior ==