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Hôtel Charavin in Avignon dans le Vaucluse

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Vaucluse

Hôtel Charavin in Avignon

    Plan de Lunel
    84000 Avignon
Crédit photo : Marianne Casamance - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1611-1617
Initial construction
1663
Erection in duchy
1793
Revolutionary seizure
1923
Architectural modification
4 octobre 1932
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Vestibule and staircase: inscription by order of 4 October 1932

Key figures

Louise d’Ancézune de Codolet - Founder Fits build the hotel between 1611-1617.
Just-André-François d’Ancézune-Cadard - Duke of Caderousse Fief erected in Duchy in 1663.
Philippe-Guillaume Gramont-Caderousse - Revolutionary owner Hotel seized and returned.
John Hay of Cromlix - Count of Inverness Jacobite died at the hotel in 1740.
Charles Édouard Stuart - Pretending to the throne Stayed in 1748.

Origin and history

The Hotel Charavin, originally called Hotel d'Ancézune then Hotel de Gramont-Caderousse, was built between 1611 and 1617 by Louise d'Ancézune de Codolet on the site of ancient gardens and a masure. She was buried there in 1620 after funding the Jesuit chapel. The hotel then passed to the family of Grammont, who inherited the fief of Caderousse, erected as duchy in 1663 by Pope Alexander VII for Just-André-François of Ancézune-Cadard, close to Louis XIV.

In the 17th century, the hotel welcomed illustrious personalities such as the Prince and Princess of Conti in 1660, the Cardinal of Bouillon in 1681, and the Marshal of France Jean d'Estrées in 1685. He also served as a refuge for Jacobites, including John Hay, Earl of Inverness, who died in 1740, and Charles Edward Stuart in 1748. During the Revolution, the hotel was seized because its owner, Philippe-Guillaume Gramont-Caderousse, was suspected of emigration, but was returned after proof of his presence in France.

Sold at the beginning of the 19th century by the 7th Duke of Caderousse, the hotel was modified in 1923 with the addition of a second floor. Its vestibule and staircase, inscribed in the historic monuments in 1932, bear witness to its past prestige. The lion porch and monumental staircase remain its most remarkable elements, symbols of its aristocratic and political history.

External links