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Rochefort Maritime Hospital en Charente-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hôpital

Rochefort Maritime Hospital

    Cours d'Ablois
    17300 Rochefort
Private property
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Hôpital maritime de Rochefort
Crédit photo : Douskka - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1666
Foundation of the Royal Hospital
1683
Transfer to Rochefort
1722
Opening of naval medicine school
1788
Opening of the new hospital
1983
Final closure
2024
Start of rehabilitation work
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs of all old buildings, including the entrance and adjoining pavilions; entrance hall and stairs; central chapel in rotunda and gallery above it (cad. E 1121, 1122, 1130 to 1135, 1137, 1138, 1142 to 1144, 1148, 1149) : entry by order of 14 September 1965; The whole naval medicine school pavilion, located at Rochefort, on Parcel No. 558 in the AY section cadastre, as coloured in red on the plan annexed to the decree: classification by order of 1 April 2022

Key figures

Pierre Toufaire - Port works engineer Design designer of the hospital (1783–88).
Jean Cochon-Dupuy - Doctor and founder of the school Created the Naval Medicine School in 1722.
Charles de Castries - State Secretary for the Navy Launches the project of the new hospital in 1782.
Amédée Lefèvre - Marine physician (1798–169) Tribute by name of hospital in 1981.

Origin and history

The Maritime Hospital of Rochefort, or Marine Hospital, is a military building inaugurated in 1788, designed as the first pavilion hospital in France. Located on the Butte outside the ramparts of Rochefort (Charente-Maritime), it replaces a previous hospital founded in 1666 in Tonnay-Charente and transferred in 1683 on the quay aux Vivres. Its innovative architecture, inspired by Stonehouse's English Royal Navy Hospital, meets the need for patient isolation to limit contagions, a major advance in hospital prophylaxis.

The project was launched in 1782 by Charles de Castries, Secretary of State for the Navy, and entrusted to engineer Pierre Toufaire. Built in five years (1783–88), the hospital extends over seven hectares with nine buildings organized in H, including a rotunda chapel and dedicated pavilions. It accommodates up to 1,200 beds, reserved for military, marine and arsenal workers. Its water supply, provided by a fire pump powered by the Charente, is a technical feat for the time.

In 1788 the École de médecine naval de Rochefort, founded in 1722 by Jean Cochon-Dupuy, was the first in the world in his field. This school trains embedded surgeons-majors, combining anatomy, medicine and pharmacy. The south-west pavilion, dedicated to the school, became a renowned teaching place, benefiting from a botanical garden (established in 1738) and a library of 25,000 volumes. Autopsies, performed on deceased patients, were systematized in the 18th century.

In the 19th century, the hospital evolved into a thermal bath in 1868 after the discovery of a ferruginous source and was renamed the Amédée-Lefèvre army hospital in 1981. Closed in 1983, it was sold in 1989 to a real estate company. The medical school pavilion, classified as a historical monument in 2022, was transformed into a museum in 1998. Since 2024, a rehabilitation in housing and thermal establishment is under way, preserving this exceptional architectural and medical heritage.

The maritime hospital illustrates the history of French naval medicine, marked by innovations such as systematic anatomical teaching or hospital hygiene. Its decline in the 20th century reflects the changes in health systems, but its legacy continues through the museum and contemporary enhancement projects. Partially ranked at the Historical Monuments (1965, 2021–2022), it remains a symbol of the military and medical genius of the Enlightenment.

External links