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Hôtel de la Raymondie in Martel dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Lot

Hôtel de la Raymondie in Martel

    Place du Marché
    46600 Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Hôtel de la Raymondie à Martel
Crédit photo : FrenchAvatar - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
1280–1330
Initial construction
1349
Defensive transformation
1440
Post-war restoration
1531
Division and sales
1906
Historical Monument
1970–2012
Restoration campaigns
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

City Hall (former Raymondie Hotel) (Box BC 308): by order of 16 October 1906; Façades sur rue et sur cour de la partie de l'exhôtel de la Raymondie aspectant sur la rue de Senlis (Box BC 307): classification by order of 21 October 1926; Parts of the former hotel located on Place du Marché and rue Tournemire: registration by order of 9 December 1926

Key figures

Bernard Raymond (ou Raymundi) - General receiver of sizes Initial sponsor, accused of embezzlement of royal funds.
Pierre Stephani - Lord of Bétaille and Gigouzac Completed the construction around 1330 and added the belfry.
Louise Raymond - Daughter of Bernard Raymond Married Pierre Stephani, transmitting the property.
Jean-Pierre de Pascal - Baill of Creysse Last private owner before the Revolution.
Henri Ramet - Local historian Author of a major study on Raymondie (1920).

Origin and history

The Raymondie Hotel, also known as the Raymondie Palace, is a medieval building located in Martel, Lot (Occitanie). Built between 1280 and 1330 on the initiative of Bernard Raymond (or Raymundi), receiver general of sizes for the king of France, it illustrates 14th century civil architecture. Its irregular pentagonal plan, scalables and belfry make it a rare example of a fortified urban hotel, designed to house shops on the ground floor and residences upstairs.

The building was completed around 1330 by Pierre Stephani, Bernard Raymond's son-in-law, who added the north wing and the belfry. During the Hundred Years War (1349), Martel's consuls turned him into a defensive refuge for the inhabitants, closing the commercial arcades. It was damaged and restored after 1440 by the Stephani, who restored commercial activities on the ground floor. In the 16th century he passed to the Rollat family by marriage, then was divided and sold to local bourgeois (del Verger, Limars, Salvat) in 1531.

Having become a municipal property after the Revolution, the hotel served as a school, a justice of peace and sheltered shops. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1906, it was the object of major restoration campaigns in the 20th and 21st centuries, notably for its Renaissance arcades, its shovel windows and its scaulders. Today, it houses the City Hall and the Uxellodunum Museum, dedicated to the Gallo-Roman history of the region.

The architecture of Raymondie reveals a duality between civilian and military functions. Its 11 southern arcades and 7 western arcades, originally planned with an awning, testify to its commercial role. The south and west facades, adorned with cross and quadrilobic windows, contrast with the north and east elevations, almost blind. The inner courtyard, lined with missing wooden galleries, kept a well and a staircase with screws added to the sixteenth century.

Among the remarkable elements, two 17th century chimneys and a monumental 16th century painting, discovered during works, are classified. The furniture includes a Crucifixion classified in 1904 and a painting by Henri Rousseau (Les Oliviers à Sfax, 1902). The successive restorations (1928–1948, 1961–1967, 2012) preserved its medieval and Renaissance characteristics, while adapting the building to its contemporary uses.

External links