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Hotel de Gondrecourt à Saint-Mihiel dans la Meuse

Meuse

Hotel de Gondrecourt

    16 Rue Larzillière Beudant
    55300 Saint-Mihiel
Hôtel de Gondrecourt
Hôtel de Gondrecourt
Hôtel de Gondrecourt
Hôtel de Gondrecourt
Crédit photo : Garitan - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
0
100
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
an VIII–1977
Larzillière period
fin XVIe siècle (vers 1580)
Initial construction
début XVIIIe siècle (vers 1705–1720)
Major transformations
1708
Dispute over support
9 septembre 1992
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

House with courtyard, fence and gate on street; dependencies and their courts; garden on the back (cad. AM 373, 374): entry by order of 9 September 1992

Key figures

Didier Galliot - Registrar of Great Days First owner certified in 1583.
Gaspard-Mathieu de Gondrecourt - Provost of Saint-Mihiel (1679–1757) Responsible for the 18th century transformations.
Famille Larzillière - Owners (year VIII–1977) Wall and portal added in the 19th.

Origin and history

The Hotel de Gondrecourt, located in Saint-Mihiel in the Meuse, has its origins at the end of the 16th century, although its current structure mainly reflects the transformations of the 18th century. Originally built for Didier Galliot, clerk of the Grands Jours (annual court) and named owner in 1583, the hotel succeeds a line of local noble families, including the Gondrecourt (mentioned in 1424), the Gynecourts, or the Wassenburgs. Its original U-shaped architecture with outbuildings surrounding a courtyard bears witness to a classic party for a seigneurial house of the modern era.

At the beginning of the 18th century, Gaspard-Mathieu de Gandrecourt (1679–1757), provost of Saint-Mihiel and seigneur de Maizey, undertook important works: uplifting of the attices, removal of allegations from the windows on the courtyard side (object of a dispute in 1708 with the Ferronier Robin), reperceiving of the posterior facades, and rebuilding of the staircase in the right wing. These modifications, dating from the first quarter of the 18th century, transform the hotel into a building more in line with the architectural canons of the period, mixing Renaissance heritage and Baroque adaptations.

The 19th century saw more discreet interventions under the Larzillière era (owners of the year VIII to 1977), such as the construction of the fence wall and the gate, or partial reconstructions of the elevations on courtyard. The hotel, registered with the Historical Monuments in 1992 for its structural elements (logis, outbuildings, garden), thus illustrates the evolution of a Lorrain aristocratic home, between medieval judicial functions and modern residential ones.

External links