Crédit photo : Original téléversé par Georgio sur Wikipédia franç - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1760
Construction of hotel
Construction of hotel 1760 (≈ 1760)
Headquarters of the established Viscount.
1789
Sale as a national good
Sale as a national good 1789 (≈ 1789)
Confiscated during the Revolution.
22 mars 1991
Registration for historical monuments
Registration for historical monuments 22 mars 1991 (≈ 1991)
Protected facades and roofs.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Façades and roofs on street and courtyard, as well as the fence wall to the west of the court, excluding modern additions (Box AI 149): inscription by order of 22 March 1991
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character cited
Sources do not mention any names.
Origin and history
The Hotel de la Vicomté de Dieppe is a building built in 1760, during the second half of the eighteenth century, to house the headquarters of the Viscounty, a place dedicated to the collection of taxes. Located at 35-37 Pier Henri-IV, it embodies the civil architecture of this period, mixing brick and stone. Its administrative role reflected the tax organization of the Old Regime, where the vicomtés served as intermediaries between the royal power and local populations.
During the French Revolution, the hotel was confiscated and sold as a national property, marking the break with the institutions of Ancien Régime. This change in status illustrates the political and social upheavals of the time, when the goods of the clergy and nobility were redistributed. In 1991, its facades, roofs and the west fence wall were listed as historic monuments, recognizing its heritage value.
Today, the building bears witness to the administrative and architectural history of Dieppe, a major port city in Normandy. Its inclusion in the title of historical monuments makes it a key element of local heritage, linked to both seigneurial justice and pre-revolutionary fiscal management. The Seine-Maritime, a department to which Dieppe belongs, thus retains a tangible vestige of its institutional past.
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