Crédit photo : Pierre-Yves Beaudouin - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1892
Installation of the butcher shop
Installation of the butcher shop 1892 (≈ 1892)
Opening at its current location.
4e quart XIXe siècle
Construction period
Construction period 4e quart XIXe siècle (≈ 1987)
Make the front by Marshal.
4 octobre 2006
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 4 octobre 2006 (≈ 2006)
Total trade registration and foresight.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The whole butcher shop with its front (case AB 82): registration by order of 4 October 2006
Key figures
Maréchal - Craft designer
Author of the front in 1892.
R. Pinson - Former owner
Name on the phylacterus.
Origin and history
La butcherie Pinson is a former butcher shop located in the heart of Chartres, in the department of Eure-et-Loir, in the Centre-Val de Loire region. Set up in 1892 at 4 rue du Soleil-d This trade is unique in its red marble base, its cast iron window decorated with butcher's fang motifs, and its wood enclosure painted in the traditional colours of the trade (beef-blood and cardinal).
The front, composed of a window divided by small irons and surmounted by a cast iron lamprequin, also includes a phylacter called "R. Pinson". The side panels in sheet metal, decorated with panels evoking capitals, house broken counters. The ensemble, preserved in its original state, reflects the craft techniques of the late nineteenth century. The central door interrupts the base, adding functional symmetry to the building.
Ranked a historic monument on October 4, 2006, the Pinson butcher shop bears witness to the French commercial heritage. Its inscription covers the entire trade, including its front and trade furniture (marbles, signboard, zinc marquise). This ranking underscores the importance of keeping these traces of Chartres' economic and social life in the industrial era, where the craft stalls rhymed the daily lives of the inhabitants.
The dominant colours (beef red and cardinal) recall the visual codes of the butchers, while the salient marquise and the cast iron details illustrate the ingenuity of the local artisans. The Pinson butcher shop, now protected, offers a rare example of an intact historical commercial front, linked to the cultural identity of Eure-et-Loir and the Centre-Val de Loire region.
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