Construction of city hall 1581 (≈ 1581)
Work of Frantz Baur, architect of the city.
1583
Date engraved on the lintel
Date engraved on the lintel 1583 (≈ 1583)
Vintage and elephant carved on the facade.
1811
Door in the centre of the Annex
Door in the centre of the Annex 1811 (≈ 1811)
Post-main building addition.
13 juin 1929
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 13 juin 1929 (≈ 1929)
Front, roof and room protection.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Façade, roof and room on the first floor: inscription by decree of 13 June 1929
Key figures
Frantz Baur - Municipal architect
Elephant sculptor and author of the city hall.
Origin and history
The house at 4 rue de la Poterne in Rouffach, Haut-Rhin, dates from the 4th quarter of the 16th century (1583). The building served as a stove (seat) for the Aus Eléphant Corporation, bringing together wood, leather and building artisans. Its façade retains a mulled chambranle door, surmounted by a relief representing an elephant (today wooded) and the 1583 vintage. The elephant, an emblem of the corporation, was carved by Frantz Baur, a municipal architect who also designed the town hall of Rouffach in 1581.
The building was inscribed in the Historical Monuments in 1929, protecting its facade, roof and a room on the first floor. The floors were thoroughly reshaped, retaining only the picketed angle chain, while the openings were redone. An adjacent annex, pierced by a door in the middle of the hanger dated 1811, completes the whole. According to an ancient notice by T. Walter, the room on the first floor had windows decorated with torso columns, and the carved door of the elephant would have changed its place over the centuries.
The corporation At the Elephant played a central role in the economic and social life of Rouffach in the Renaissance. Corporate stoves, like this one, served as meeting places, regulating trades and representing the interests of artisans to local authorities. The elephant's choice as an emblem, although stunned today, probably symbolized strength, wisdom or a connection to local traditions or exotic stories popular at the time.
Announcements
Please log in to post a review