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Former hospital à Semur-en-Auxois en Côte-d'or

Former hospital

    7 Rue de L Hôpital
    21140 Semur-en-Auxois
Ownership of a municipal public institution
Ancien hôpital
Ancien hôpital
Ancien hôpital
Ancien hôpital
Ancien hôpital
Ancien hôpital
Crédit photo : PIERRE ANDRE LECLERCQ - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
4e quart XVIe siècle
Construction of Governor's Hotel
11 juillet 1734
Purchase of the Châtelet hotel
1744–1749
Construction right wing and chapel
14 septembre 1749
Consecration of the chapel
1827
Expansion Men's Hall
1843–1844
Arnault wing construction
1964
Medical Surgical Unit
1976
Conversion into retirement home
juin 2009
Final closure
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The wrought iron entrance grid: inscription by decree of 26 October 1927 - The former governor's hotel, the right and left wings, in full, the closing wall of the court of honour, the pillars of the gate, the guard's dwelling (Box AD 126): inscription by order of 21 June 2010

Key figures

Florent-Claude du Châtelet - Last hotel occupant Governor of Semur, husband of Emilia.
Émilie du Châtelet - Mathematical and Physician Wife of the governor, indirectly related.
Vincent François - Dijon Sculptor Author of the decorations of the chapel (1745–1748).
Pierre-Marie Arnault - Lawyer and donor Finanças left wing (died 1839).
Roger-Martin Barade - Dijon architect Author of the surgical unit (1964).

Origin and history

The former hospital in Semur-en-Auxois came into being in July 1744 when the governor's hotel (16th century) was acquired by the directors of the Saint-Jacques hospital. This building, originally owned by Florent-Claude du Châtelet (Governor of Semur and spouse of Émilie du Châtelet), was transformed to accommodate sick people. Between 1744 and 1749, a new building was built to the right of the courtyard, housing two treatment rooms (Sainte-Marthe for women, Saint-Louis for men) surrounding a chapel consecrated in 1749. The work involved local and Dijon artisans, such as the sculptor Vincent François or the masons Malardie and Sureau.

The chapel, adorned with cradle vaults and an arcade in the middle (today walled), communicated with the rooms through side doors. In 1745, a wrought iron door was added to the entrance, while a cotton mill, operated by children, operated from 1766 to 1807 in the gardens. In the 19th century, the hospital grew: the men's room was extended in 1827, and a symmetrical wing (the Arnault foundation) was built in 1843-1844 thanks to a legacy. Subsequent developments included a campanile in 1822, baths in 1853-1854, and an isolation pavilion in 1905-1911.

In the 20th century, the hospital evolved with the construction of a medical-surgical block in 1964 and renovations in 1974, before it was converted into a retirement home in 1976. The final closure took place in 2009, marking the end of six centuries of hospital history. The site, partially protected (entrance grille classified in 1927, buildings registered in 2010), preserves traces of its past: lapidary marks, pancake vaults, and a characteristic U-shaped courtyard. Local materials (Pouillenay stone, Cussy-les-Forges tiles) and architectural interventions such as Lapoon and Fénéon testify to its regional anchoring.

Among the notable architectural details, the chapel presents a Latin inscription (VIRGINI INIRMORUM SALUTI, 1749) and elements carved by François, including cherubs and mascarons. The halls of patients, heated and equipped with latrines, reflect the hygienic progress of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The legacy of Pierre-Marie Arnault (Semurian lawyer, died in 1839) allowed the symmetric extension of the left wing, while the transformations of the 20th century (woodwork in 1973, kitchen in 1974) adapted space to modern uses. The ensemble illustrates the evolution of care and hospital architecture in Burgundy.

The monument is also linked to historical figures such as Émilie du Châtelet (mathematician and wife of the governor), although its direct role in the hospital is not documented. The minutes of 1734 reveal concerns about decency (masking chimneys by woodwork) and spatial organization (gender separation at offices). The closure of the mill in 1807 and the construction of the surgical block in 1964 marked the region's economic and medical transitions. Today, the former hospital, a communal property, remains a testimony to the charitable and architectural practices of the Old Regime in contemporary times.

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