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Castle Borély or estate Borély à Marseille 8ème dans les Bouches-du-Rhône

Patrimoine classé
Musée
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Bouches-du-Rhône

Castle Borély or estate Borély

    137 Avenue Clôt Bey
    13008 Marseille 8ème
Ownership of the municipality
Château Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Château Borély ou domaine Borély
Crédit photo : JohnLuke - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1684
Purchase of initial domain
1767
Architectural project
1784
Death of Louis Joseph Denis Borély
1856
Exchange with the city
1860
Opening of the park and racetrack
1936
Historical monument classification
2013
Museum reopening
2024
Registration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château Borély: by order of 21 September 1936; The Borély estate, in whole, including the access aisle from Avenue du Prado, with the exception of the castle already classified and represented in black on the annexed plan, located avenue du Parc-Borély, according to the plan annexed to the order, appearing in the cadastre, section 836 A, under Parcel Nos. 7 and 8, section 836 B, under Parcel Nos. 1, 2 and 4, section 844 R, under Parcel Nos. 1, 2 and 14, and on the non-cadastre public domain corresponding to Avenue du Parc-Borély: inscription by order of 5 September 2024

Key figures

Joseph Borély - Maritime negotiator Buyer of the estate in 1684.
Louis Borély - Commander of the castle Expands the estate and launches the construction.
Charles-Louis Clérisseau - Architect Author of the original plans (1767).
Marie-Joseph Peyre - Local architect Simplify the plans of the castle.
Honoré Borély - Heir and Academician Keep the castle during the Revolution.
Gaston de Panisse - Last private owner Exchange the castle with the city in 1856.
Adolphe Alphand - Landscape Designs Borély Park (1860–180).

Origin and history

Borély Castle is a neo-classical bastide built in the 4th quarter of the 18th century in the Bonneveine district of Marseille (8th arrondissement). He was commissioned by Louis Borély, a member of a powerful family of Marseille traders, and he embodied the fascist of the merchant elites of the time. The architect Charles-Louis Clérisseau drew plans in 1767, before Marie-Joseph Peyre simplified them. The castle, richly decorated, includes a private marble chapel and sumptuous lounges, reflecting the prestige of its owners.

The Borély family, anobligated under Louis XV, was enriched by the maritime trade (wheat, silk, oil) between Marseille and Egypt. Nicolas Borély, first bishop of Marseilles in 1747, and his brother Louis enlarged the family estate by successive acquisitions ("La Tirane", "La Michèle", etc.). The castle, completed by Louis Joseph Denis Borély, was decorated by the painter Louis Chaix before his death in 1784. His heir, Honoré Borély, an academician, preserved the place during the Revolution.

In 1856, Marquis Gaston de Panisse, the last owner, exchanged the castle for a land at the Chartreux, as part of an agreement with the city and industrialist Paulin Talabot. In 1860, the estate was transformed into a city: the racetrack and the Borély park (17 hectares, designed by Adolphe Alphand) opened to the public. The castle first houses the Museum of Archaeology (1856–1989), then, after restoration, the Museum of Decorative Arts, Faience and Fashion since 2013.

Ranked a historic monument in 1936, Borély Castle is an exceptional testimony of Provencal neo-classical architecture and Marseille economic history. Its park, collections (feathers, old fashions) and hippodrome make it a major cultural site. The entire estate, outside the already classified castle, is listed as historical monuments in September 2024.

Future

The castle Borély serves as an example of the museum of decorative arts, faience and fashion.

External links