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Eltz Hotel in Thionville en Moselle

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Moselle

Eltz Hotel in Thionville

    12 Place du Château
    57100 Thionville
Hôtel dEltz à Thionville
Hôtel dEltz à Thionville
Crédit photo : Fab5669 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1551
Initial construction
1899
Acquisition by sisters
1903
Neo-Gothic extension
1919
Completion of work postponed
1939
Become a courthouse
27 mai 1980
Registration historical monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Renaissance elements of the facade on the square and porch leading to the court (ca. 4 40): inscription by order of 27 May 1980

Key figures

Bernard d'Eltz - Sponsor Have the hotel built around 1551.
Sœurs de la Divine Providence - Owners (1899-1939) Turn the site into a boarding school.
Architecte Loosen - Design designer (1914) Plan chapel and staircase.
Architecte Le Chevalier - Redesignation of court (1939) Adapts the hotel to a courthouse.

Origin and history

The Hotel d'Eltz, located in Thionville, is built around 1551 by Bernard d'Eltz in a Luxembourg Renaissance style. From this period there remain the porch with two vaulted bays, three windows on the ground floor, the cellars and a large vaulted room (current courtroom). The veins of this room evoke those of the Tower aux Puces (1583-1586) or of the choir of the Saint John Baptist church of Volkrange, illustrating the regional architectural influence.

In 1899, the hotel was acquired by the Sisters of Divine Providence (or Our Lady of Providence according to the sources) to establish a boarding school for young girls. In 1903, neo-Gothic extensions were erected on the edge of Moselle, followed in 1914 by the purchase of a nearby house (No. 10, Place du Château). The architect Loosen then planned a chapel in the vaulted room and a staircase in the old courtyard, works postponed by the First World War and completed in 1919.

The site evolved with the addition of a floor to the 1903 (1919) building, and the construction of a new boarding school in 1934 near the present Notre Dame Square. In 1939, the hotel was transformed into a courthouse by the departmental architect Le Chevalier, who remodelled the chapel into a courtroom and expanded the liaison corps. The facades on the courtyard were restored around 1950. The Renaissance elements of the façade and the porch were listed as historical monuments in 1980.

The monument thus illustrates the functional changes of a private hotel: from aristocratic residence to school and then to judicial building. Its architecture combines Renaissance heritage and additions of the 19th and 20th centuries, reflecting the successive needs of its occupants. The protection of 1980 underscores the heritage value of the oldest parts, witnesses to the Luxembourg influence in Lorraine.

External links