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The Dijonval in Sedan dans les Ardennes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine industriel
Manufacture
Manufacture royale
Ardennes

The Dijonval in Sedan

    10-6 Avenue du Général-Margueritte
    08200 Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Manufacture royale de draps Le Dijonval à Sedan
Crédit photo : L Ardenais - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1646
Royal Privilege granted
1711
Repurchase by the Paignon
1755
Construction of the central body
1778
Extension of wings
1820
Acquisition by Babot
1851
Reconstruction of the North Wing
1958
End of industrial activity
1962-1980
Historic Monument Protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Ground of the garden (for the part owned by the hospital-hospice) (Case D 32): inscription by order of 24 March 1962 - Façades and roofs (excluding those of the two pavilions of the garden) , the two interior staircases of the main building, the garden floor (for the property part of the commune) (Box BK 175): classification by decree of 26 May 1977 - Façades and roofs of the two pavilions of the garden, 6, avenue du Général Margueritte (Box BK 176): classification by decree of 7 March 1980

Key figures

Nicolas Cadeau - Founder and first operator Beneficiary of the Royal Privilege of 1646.
Nicolas-Jean Paignon - Owner and patron Buyer of the site in 1711, initiators of extensions.
Jean-Baptiste Paignon - Expansion architect Head of the Central Corps (1755).
Alexandre Bacot - Industrial Modernizer Introduced the steam machine in 1820.
Nicolas de Quatremère - Architect Designs wings in return (18th century).

Origin and history

The Royal Linen Factory Le Dijonval, located in Sedan in the Ardennes, was founded in the 17th century under the impetus of a royal privilege granted in 1646 to three Parisian merchants, including Nicolas Giftau. This privilege allows them to produce fine sheets "like Holland", an exclusive in France for 20 years. Installed in the suburb of the Cassine, on a site initially called plain of Ijonval (corrupted later in Dijonval), the factory becomes a major pole of the French drapery, competed locally by other workshops such as Antoine Rousseau ("the big dog"). The first installations, including a house and a dye shop, date back to the 1660s, but a fire in 1870 destroyed part of the original buildings.

In the 18th century, the Paignon family acquired the site in 1711 and began its expansion. Nicolas-Jean Paignon, then his descendant Jean-Baptiste, radically transformed the whole: the central body, completed in 1755, has 25 spans on three levels, surmounted by a campanile. The "U" wings, extended in 1778, frame a garden descending towards the Meuse. The French Revolution partially damaged the north wing, rebuilt later in 1851. Under the industrial era, the Bacot family, owner from 1820, modernized the factory with steam machines, symbolized by a chimney visible from 1841. The site, leased to textile manufacturers like Klein in the late 19th century, ceased all activity in 1958.

Ranked a historical monument in stages (1962 for the garden floor, 1977-1980 for facades and roofs), the manufacture Le Dijonval illustrates the evolution of textile techniques, from colbertism to industrial revolution. Its architecture, combining classicism (triangular border, pilasters) and functionality (lucarns for drying sheets), reflects its central role in the sedan economy. The departmental archives of the Ardennes (funds 30J) keep documents about the Gift, Paignon and Babot families, although they are not. Today, the site, owned by the municipality, is being rehabilitated for housing, thus preserving a unique industrial heritage in the East.

External links