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Pézenas City Hall dans l'Hérault

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hôtel de ville

Pézenas City Hall

    12 Rue Massillon
    34120 Pézenas

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1597
College Foundation
1601
Acquisition of land
1610-1622
Construction of the chapel
1670-1674
Extension of seminars
1733
Opening of the monumental portal
1931
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Henri IV - King of France Founded the college by letters-patentes.
Connétable de Montmorency - Noble Solicitor Called for the establishment of the college.
Duc de Ventadour - Noble Solicitor Supports the foundation with Henry IV.
Père Gontier - Jesuit architect Designs the initial plans of the college.
Père Barème - Architect of the Oratory Directed the extension of seminars (1670-1674).

Origin and history

The town hall of Pézenas occupies the premises of the former royal college founded in 1597 by Henri IV, at the request of the connetable of Montmorency and the Duke of Ventadour. Destined to teach fine letters, liberal arts, and Greek and Latin languages, he was first directed by a secular regent before being entrusted to the Fathers of the Christian Doctrine, then to the Oratory in 1623. Built on the plans of Father Gontier (jesuite) after the acquisition of a mas in 1601, the college was completed in 1611 and extended between 1670 and 1674 by the buildings of the great and small seminaries, raised under the direction of Father Barème.

The chapel, built between 1610 and 1622, now retains only its 18th century façade, marked by a style close to the Giral brothers (ionic pilasters, garlands of foliage). The monumental gate on Massillon Street, opened in 1733, replaces houses acquired by the city. The original arrangement of the college, organised around a rectangular courtyard with refectory and alcove rooms, was profoundly transformed in the 19th century. After the Revolution, the municipality abandoned the former Consular House to settle in the premises of the major seminary, giving the building its present function.

Among the preserved elements are the door to the courtyard, two ground floor rooms, a central staircase, and a vaulted gallery opening onto the old garden of the simple (now Boby-Lapointe Square). The emblem of the Oratory — Jesus Maria in a crown of thorns — always adorns the front of the gate. The site, classified as a Historic Monument in 1931 (registered facade), bears witness to architectural and educational changes between Renaissance and modern times.

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