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Hôtel de Beaune in Paris à Paris 1er dans Paris 6ème

Patrimoine classé
Hotel particulier classé
Maison des hommes et des femmes célèbres
Paris

Hôtel de Beaune in Paris

    7 Rue du Regard
    75006 Paris 6e Arrondissement
Hôtel de Beaune à Paris
Hôtel de Beaune à Paris
Hôtel de Beaune à Paris
Hôtel de Beaune à Paris
Hôtel de Beaune à Paris
Hôtel de Beaune à Paris
Hôtel de Beaune à Paris
Hôtel de Beaune à Paris
Crédit photo : Mbzt - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1728
Construction by the Carmelites
1789
Seized as a national good
1825-1826
Chateaubriand Residence
1908
Disappearance from the garden
16 mars 1926
Registration historical monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades on the street and on the boulevard: inscription by decree of 16 March 1926

Key figures

Ferdinand de Rohan Guéméné - Archbishop of Cambrai Tenant before the Revolution.
François-René de Chateaubriand - Writer Residence from 1825 to 1826.
Claude-Victor Perrin - Marshal of France Busy from 1830 to 1841.
Maximilien Constant Delafontaine - Sculptor Died in the hotel in 1867.

Origin and history

The Beaune Hotel is a Parisian mansion built around 1728 by the Carmelites on a plot close to their convent. Together with the nearby Rothembourg hotel, it is part of a series of report buildings built at that time. On the eve of the Revolution, he was praised to Bishop Ferdinand de Rohan Guéméné, then Archbishop of Cambrai, before being seized as a national good.

Ranked a historic monument in 1926, the hotel retains its facades on Rue du Regard and Boulevard Raspail. He lost his garden around 1908 when it was drilled. His illustrious occupants include the writer François-René de Chateaubriand (1825-1826) and Marshal Claude-Victor Perrin (1830-1841), while sculptor Maximilien Delafontaine died there in 1867.

The building illustrates the 18th century Parisian civil architecture, marked by major urban transformations such as the creation of Boulevard Raspail. Its inscription in the historic monuments in 1926 protected its facades, witness to this fascist period when private hotels housed the aristocracy and intellectual elites.

External links