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House says Ostel Millet à Montluçon dans l'Allier

House says Ostel Millet

    2 Rue de la Charité
    03100 Montluçon
Private property
Maison dit Ostel Millet
Maison dit Ostel Millet
Maison dit Ostel Millet
Maison dit Ostel Millet
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVe siècle
Construction and embellishment
1573
Sale by Anthoine Millet
1765-1773
Drilling of bays on the floors
Début XVIIIe siècle
Addition of a south wing
Milieu XIXe siècle
Revival reconstruction of the facade
19 mai 2003
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The house comprising a staircase turret and cellars with a pool (cad. AM 191): inscription by order of 19 May 2003

Key figures

Guillaume Millet - Finance and Justice Officer Initial constructor in the 15th century.
Olivier Millet - Officer of the Dukes of Bourbon Embellishes the home in the 15th century.
Anthoine Millet - Lord of the Chastelette Sell the house in 1573.
Jean-Baptiste Verrouquier de Saint-Argier - Owner in the 18th century Add a south wing around 1712.
Étienne de La Roche de Galmaud - Lieutenant Colonel of cavalry Command of berries around 1765-1773.
François Augustin Grozieux de Laplaine - Notary in the 19th century Reconstructs the facade in Gothic style.

Origin and history

The house called Ostel Millet, also wrongly called "house of Condé", is a private hotel located in Montluçon, in the Allier department. Built in the 15th century by Guillaume and Olivier Millet, officers of the Dukes of Bourbon, it illustrates the bourbonese civil architecture of that time. The facade on the courtyard retains a staircase turret decorated with gothic decorations (accolades, pinacles, shield), while a stone staircase serves apartments renovated in the 18th and 19th centuries.

In the 15th century, the house was embellished by the Millet family of finance and justice officers serving the Dukes of Bourbon. Sold in 1573 by Anthoine Millet, it passed into the hands of the Charreton family throughout the 17th century. At the beginning of the 18th century, Jean-Baptiste Verrouquier de Saint-Argier added a south wing, followed by bay holes around 1765-1773 for Étienne de La Roche de Galmaud or his widow. An extension to the east, undated, completes the whole.

The facade on Notre-Dame Street was rebuilt in the mid-19th century in a neo-Gothic style by notary François Augustin Grozieux de Laplaine. The latter includes a statue of Saint Francis de Sales and a gothic dais flamboyant re-employment. The neogothic holes on the ground floor, made in 1998, preserve a 17th century door topped by a carved shield. The house, protected since 2003, bears witness to the architectural and social evolutions of Montluçon, the Dukes of Bourbon in the modern era.

The interior reveals a vaulted stone staircase, distributing decorated apartments in the 18th and 19th centuries. The staircase turret, adorned with Gothic motifs (Saint Andrew's Cross, ecus), and cellars with pool are among the protected elements. Despite its erroneous name of "house of Condé" in 1928, no historical connection with this princely family is attested. Rather, the monument reflects the social ascent of the local bourgeois families, from the Millet to the Charreton, via the Verrouquier and the La Roche de Galmaud.

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