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Hotel de Warenghien de Flory in Douai dans le Nord

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Nord

Hotel de Warenghien de Flory in Douai

    250 Rue Morel
    59500 Douai
Crédit photo : This illustrationwas made byPeter Potrowl. Please - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1754
Construction of hotel
21 janvier 1780
Sale to the Abbey of Flines
1791
Acquisition by the Warenghien
1914-1918
German requisition
18 août 1944
Historical monument classification
12 août 1944
Allied bombardment
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The hotel and its garden: registration by decree of 18 August 1944

Key figures

Georges Durand - Architect and entrepreneur Initial builder of the hotel in 1754.
Bathilde de Saint Aldégonde - Abbesse de Flines Buyer in 1780 for the abbey.
Louis Joseph de Warenghien de Flory - Attorney General Trustee Acquiert the hotel in 1791.
Louis-Joseph Lahure - General and Military Governor Gendre de Warenghien, occupying in 1815.
Manfred von Richthofen - German pilot (Red Baron) Stayed during the First War.
Gérard de Warenghien - Owner post-1944 Supervised the postwar restoration.

Origin and history

The Hotel de Warenghien de Flory, located on Rue de la Porte Morel in Douai, was built in 1754 by Georges Durand, lord of Elecourt, architect and builder of fortifications. Acquisced as land for 5,000 guilders, the hotel was designed according to the architectural rules of 1718, reflecting the dominant French style after the installation of the Flanders Parliament in Douai in 1713. Its sober facade on street contrasts with an elegant Italian-style courtyard, typical of the customsian residences of the time.

In 1780, the hotel was sold to Bathilde de Saint Aldégonde, an abbess of Flines, who was planning to set up a refuge for his religious community, a project finally abandoned. Rented to a magistrate of the Douai Parliament, the building became national in 1791 before being acquired by Louis Joseph de Warenghien de Flory, former councillor in the Flanders Parliament. The latter, close to Merlin de Douai, will house his son-in-law, General Lahure, before the family transmits it over several generations.

The hotel experienced military requisitions during the two world wars: it will house German pilots, including Manfred von Richthofen, during the First War, then suffered major damage in 1944 during an ally bombardment against the nearby station. Ranked a historic monument on August 18, 1944, it was restored under the direction of Gérard de Warenghien and the chief architect of the Historic Monuments. Still owned by the Warenghien family after more than two centuries, it embodies the history of the Douaisis.

Architecturally, the hotel illustrates the transition between the Flemish and French influences, with a sandstone and limestone facade decorated with joined bricks. Its quadrilateral, aligned on the public road in contrast to local traditions, and its inner courtyard more worked, underline this duality. The archives also mention its role in the judicial and military life of Douai, from the Flanders Parliament to the German occupation.

Historical sources, including Duthillœul's (1860) work and the Dinaux archives, confirm its heritage importance. Today, the Hotel de Warenghien de Flory remains a preserved testimony of the Douaisian aristocracy, linked to figures like Lahure or the Warenghien, and a symbol of resilience to the conflicts of the 20th century.

External links