Calvin Auditory
The Calvin Auditory is a Protestant chapel, originally a Catholic place of worship under the name Chapelle Notre-Dame-la-Neuve, which was built in the 15th century as a Marian church on the site of shrines dating from the 5th century and originally dedicated to Notre-Dame. In 1536, with the advent of the Reformation in Geneva, Calvin desacralised it and transformed it into an auditorium, where he preached his Reformed theology. The auditorium was also used by the Scottish reformer John Knox during his stay in Geneva in the 1550s.