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House of Alphonse-Daudet in Champrosay à Draveil dans l'Essonne

Musée
Maison des hommes et des femmes célèbres
Musée des écrivains célèbres
Essonne

House of Alphonse-Daudet in Champrosay

    33 Rue Alphonse Daudet
    91210 Draveil

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
début des années 1830
Construction of the villa
1855
Delacroix Dinner
1887
Purchase by the Daudet
16 juillet 1896
Death of Edmond de Goncourt
1897
Sale after death of Daudet
1946
Repurchase by a religious community
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Alphonse Daudet - Writer Owner, writes several works.
Eugène Delacroix - Painter Dinner in 1855, painted *Chevaux sortant de la mer*.
Edmond de Goncourt - Writer Murdered in the house in 1896.
Marcel Proust - Writer Summon the house in *Looking for lost time*.
Claude Pouillet - Physician, first known owner Son-in-law of Brongniart, host of Delacroix.
Frédéric Villot - Conservator at the Louvre Neighbor, present at the 1855 dinner.
Général Charles Parchappe - Owner before the Daudet Host of Delacroix in 1855.

Origin and history

The house of Alphonse Daudet, located in the hamlet of Champrosay in Draveil (Essonne), is a villa built in the early 1830s under the reign of Louis-Philippe. Originally, it belongs to Claude Pouillet, physicist and son-in-law of the architect Alexandre-Théodore Brongniart, who receives personalities like Eugene Delacroix. The latter dine there in 1855 with General Charles Parchappe and Frédéric Villot, curator at the Louvre, and painted Les Chevaux leaving the sea. The property then changes hands before being acquired by the Daudet.

In 1887, Alphonse and Julia Daudet bought the house at auction after their father's death. For a decade, until 1897, Daudet wrote part of his work there and welcomed a circle of prestigious artists and writers: Flaubert, Maupassant, Zola, Renoir, Tourgueniev, Manet, and Edmond de Goncourt, who died there in 1896. Marcel Proust, close to their son Lucien, evokes this period in a letter as an inspiration for Swann's side. The house, a place of creation and intellectual exchange, is sold after the death of Alphonse Daudet.

From 1897 to the present day, property knew several vocations. Repurchased in 1946 by a religious community, she became the priory of Saint John, hosting the magazine PRESENCES until the 1960s, with contributions from Mauriac or Gabriel Marcel. Transformed into a nursing home of the psychiatric institution It is now a private residence open for cultural events, perpetuating its link with art and literature.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Contact organisation : 06 30 56 79 08