Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Chenizot Hotel in Paris à Paris 1er dans Paris 4ème

Patrimoine classé
Hotel particulier classé
Paris

Chenizot Hotel in Paris

    51-53 Rue Saint-Louis-en-l'Île
    75004 Paris 4e Arrondissement
Hôtel de Chenizot - Paris 4ème
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Hôtel de Chenizot à Paris
Crédit photo : NonOmnisMoriar - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1719
Transformation by Chenizot
février 1831
Sacking the Archdiocese
11 septembre 1840
Rental in the Archdiocese
juin 1848
Death of Monsignor Affre
1850-1862
Headquarters of the Gendarmerie
1863
Sale of the garden
1904-1930
Rene Guénon residence
11 octobre 2002
Historical Monument
août 2013
End of renovation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

All facades and roofs on street and on both courtyards; the door under the passage connecting the two courtyards (P); stairs AB, C, D, E, F and G; the soil of the two courses (cf. 04 AV 84): by order of 11 October 2002

Key figures

Jean-François Guyot de Chenizot - Receiver General for Finance Owner and sponsor of the transformations in 1719.
Pierre Vigné de Vigny - Architect Author of the balcony and decors.
Denys Affre - Archbishop of Paris Lived and died in the hotel.
Marie Dominique Auguste Sibour - Archbishop of Paris Successor of Affre, left the hotel in 1849.
René Guénon - Metaphysician Habita hotel from 1904 to 1930.
Madame Tallien - Revolutionary figure Lived there from 1788 to 1793.
Félix de Pachtère - Archaeologist Born in the hotel in 1881.

Origin and history

The Chenizot hotel is a private hotel located on the island of Saint-Louis, in the 4th arrondissement of Paris. Acquired in 1719 by Jean-François Guyot de Chenizot, Receiver General of Finance in Rouen, he was transformed by architect Pierre Vigné de Vigny, who added a balcony and decorated the facades. This early 18th-century building replaces an older 17th-century home, and illustrates the refined civil architecture of that time.

In 1840, after the riots of 1831 that damaged the archdiocese of Paris, the state rented the hotel to install Archbishop Denys Affre. He died there in 1848 after being wounded on the revolutionary days of June. His successor, Marie Dominique Auguste Sibour, left in 1849 to settle on rue de Grenelle. The hotel then served, from 1850 onwards, as staff for the 1st Legion of Gendarmerie until 1862.

The garden was sold in 1863, and the hotel became a private residence, including the metaphysicist René Guénon from 1904 to 1930. Ranked a Historic Monument in 2002 for its facades, roofs, stairs and courtyards, it underwent a major renovation completed in 2013. The second court preserves traces of light industrial activities of the 19th and 20th centuries, such as workshops for the manufacture of frames of the day.

Among the personalities related to the hotel were Madame Tallien, who lived there with her first husband from 1788 to 1793, as well as the archaeologist Felix de Pachtère, born in the building in 1881. The sundial of the courtyard recalls that of the hotel of Lauzun, another emblematic hotel on the island of Saint-Louis.

The protected elements include facades, roofs, stairs and the floor of both courtyards. Architect Pierre de Vigny, ironmaker Nicolas Viennot and sculptor François Roumier contributed to his embellishment. Today, the hotel remains a testimony of Parisian history, mixing architectural, religious and military heritage.

External links