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Hötel known as Hôtel du Louvre or Hôtel de Vignolles dans la Sarthe

Sarthe

Hötel known as Hôtel du Louvre or Hôtel de Vignolles

    8 Rue de l'Écrevisse
    72000 au Mans
Crédit photo : Le Mans - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1472
Land transfer
1529
Deliberative hotel project
1548
Purchased by Jean de Vignolles
1549
Construction begins
1562
Sentencing of Vignolles
1793
Destruction of the neighbouring chapel
1799
Hotel Division
1926
City acquisition
1946
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts and roofs: classification by decree of 12 August 1946

Key figures

Jean de Vignolles - King's adviser and owner Sponsor and first occupant of the hotel.
Pierre Couthardy - Ordinary Judge of Le Mans First beneficiary of the land transferred in 1472.
Charles d’Anjou - Count of Maine Cedes plots of the palace for lack of funds.
François Ier - King of France Supports in 1529 an unrealized deliberative hotel project.
Guy Daron - Former owner Sell the houses to Vignolles in 1548.

Origin and history

The Vignolles hotel, built in 1549 by Jean de Vignolles, is a private hotel located in Saint-Pierre Square, Old Mans. Its local Gothic architecture, marked by pronounced verticality, reflects a transition between 15th century traditions and Parisian influences. Although incomplete, the building is distinguished by its U-shaped plan, its two courtyards and asymmetric pavilions, designed to impress. Its horizontal spread, rare for the period, contrasts with the atsard hotels of the neighborhood.

The land once belonged to the Counts of Maine, integrating the Comtal Palace before being ceded to individuals in the 15th century, for lack of means for its maintenance. Jean de Vignolles, the king's adviser and lieutenant of the senate floor of Maine, acquired the site in 1548 to erect a residence combining prestige and functionality. The materials (tuffeau, oak, slate of Anjou) reveal a measured luxury, while the layout of the rooms – including 11 upstairs bedrooms – suggests both residential and representative use.

The construction, financed by Vignolles' revenues, uses local techniques (meltons, lime coating) while integrating luxurious elements such as Lardoise. The blazoned portal and the two courtyards, one closed by a wall-screen, highlight the owner's wealth. However, subsequent changes (division in 1799, destruction of the neighbouring chapel in 1793) altered its original unit. Ranked a historic monument in 1946, the hotel remains a testament to the architectural ambition of the Renaissance in Le Mans.

The Hotel de Vignolles also embodies the religious tensions of the time: in 1562, Jean de Vignolles and his wife, condemned to exile for their Protestantism, saw their home marked by a cross bearing their sentence. The building, designed to symbolically dominate Saumur Protestantism, illustrates rivalries among local elites. Today, since 1926, it has been continuously restored to preserve its heritage.

Its architecture, halfway between the Parisian and Ligerian models, prefigures the classic 17th century hotels. The western courtyard, initially secondary, becomes the main entrance after the abandonment of the east court, provided as aircraft space. The projected galleries and arcades, partially realized, were to reinforce the monumental effect. Despite its imperfections, the hotel remains a rare example of adapting aristocratic codes to a provincial urban context.

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