Pierre Bossan

Pierre Bossan plaque. Sculpture by Paul-Émile Millefaut

Pierre-Marie Bossan (Lyon, 1814–1888) was a French historicist architect, a pupil of Henri Labrouste, specialising in ecclesiastical architecture. In 1844 he was appointed architect to the diocese of Lyon, where his major work was the neo-Byzantine basilica of Notre-Dame de Fourvière (1872–84), on a height dominating Lyon. He also designed Lyon's Église Saint-Georges, an extension to the parish church at Ars-sur-Formans (1862–65)[1] and churches at Régny, Neulise and Couzon-au-Mont-d'Or (1854–56), as well as the pilgrimage basilica of La Louvesc (1865) in the Department of Ardèche, Dauphiné.

There are funerary monuments designed by Bossan at Valence.

He is buried in the Cimetière de Loyasse, Lyon.

Selected works

Notes

  1. The twelfth-century church of Saint Sixte, was rebuilt by the Curé of Ars, as a narthex to the basilica by Bossan. In the basilica is a reliquary containing the body of the curé, canonised as Saint Jean-Marie Vianney.
  2. Saints et Madones au coins de nos rues, éditions lyonnaises d'art et d'histoire, 1995:58
  3. Jean Pelletier, Connaître son arrondissement, le 3eme, éditions lyonnaises d'art et d'histoire, pp. 42-43
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