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Bouxwiller Chancery dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Chancellerie
Bas-Rhin

Bouxwiller Chancery

    Place du Château
    67330 Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Chancellerie de Bouxwiller
Crédit photo : Buchsweiler - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1658-1663
Construction of Chancery
1688
Destruction of the former Chancery
1827
Acquisition by municipality
1909
Restoration of portals
16 octobre 1930
Registration for Historic Monuments
1974
Discovery of mummified cats
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades, roofs and entrance hall: inscription by order of 16 October 1930

Key figures

Frédéric Casimir de Hanau-Lichtenberg - Sponsor Count Ordonna built it in 1658.
Hans Weibel - Strasbourg architect Designed the building between 1658-1663.
Bernasconi - Restaurant restaurant (1909) Reconstituted revolutionary coats of arms.

Origin and history

The former Chancery of Hanau-Lichtenberg County, located in Bouxwiller (Bas-Rhin), was built between 1658 and 1663 by the Strasbourg architect Hans Weibel, on the order of Count Frédéric Casimir of Hanau-Lichtenberg. This rectangular two-storey building, with carved sill façades and Renaissance gates, replaced a first chancery destroyed in 1688. It also housed the Chamber of Accounts and a carrosses discount, reflecting its central administrative role.

The construction cost 7,703 Gulden, not counting the chores imposed on the inhabitants. To avoid the bad fate, offerings (wine glasses, pieces, and two mummified cats discovered in 1974) were placed in the walls. After the dissolution of the county, the municipality acquired the building in 1827, partially renovating into school halls before settling in the town hall. Joined the historic monuments in 1930, it retains remarkable elements such as its zinc gargoyles with dragon heads and its clock bell.

The main facades feature monumental portals decorated with Corinthian columns, angelels, and coats of arms: that of Bouxwiller and the eagle of the Holy Empire on the Place du Château; the coat of arms of the Hanau Lichtenberg (1606) on the Rue de la Chancellerie. The interior doors, dated 1662, combine carved sandstone and marked wood. Upstairs, the Museum of the Land of Hanau now occupies spaces formerly dedicated to the Comtal archives, while taskmarks recall the craft of the time.

Restored several times (notably in 1909 by Bernasconi, who restored the coat of arms hammered during the Revolution), the building combines civic functions and historical heritage. Its passing skylights, half-croup roof, and symbolic details (such as the Swan, Hanau emblem) illustrate the Germanic influence and administrative importance of Bouxwiller under the Old Regime. At present, it has been restored to preserve its cultural and municipal role.

External links