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Hotel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller dans le Haut-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Haut-Rhin

Hotel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller

    1 rue du 4 Février
    68500 Guebwiller
Hôtel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller
Hôtel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller
Hôtel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller
Hôtel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller
Hôtel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller
Hôtel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller
Hôtel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller
Hôtel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller
Hôtel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller
Crédit photo : Thomas Bresson - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1765-1768
Building construction
15 février 1935
Registration for historical monuments
1984
Transformation into a museum
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs: inscription by order of 15 February 1935

Key figures

Louis Beuque - Owner Construction began in 1765.
Gabriel Ignace Ritter - Architect The building was completed in 1768.

Origin and history

The Hotel du Grand-Doyenné de Guebwiller is a historic monument located at 1 rue du 4-Febrier, in the Alsatian city of Guebwiller (High Rhine). Built between 1765 and 1768, it was originally used as a canonical residence, reflecting 18th-century religious civil architecture. Its inscription in the historic monuments in 1935 bears witness to its heritage value, particularly for its protected facades and roofs.

The construction of the building was undertaken in 1765 by Louis Beuque, the master builder, and completed in 1768 under the direction of architect Gabriel Ignace Ritter. Originally designed as a great dean, the building housed ecclesiastical dignitaries before being transformed into a Florival museum in 1984, now associated with the Theodore Deck Museum. Its history illustrates the evolution of the uses of religious buildings in Alsace.

The Hotel du Grand-Doyenné is situated in an urban context marked by the influence of the Catholic Church before the French Revolution. Guebwiller, a dynamic city of the Haut-Rhin, saw the coexistence of spiritual power and craft activities, as evidenced by the other classified monuments of the commune. The protection of 1935 underscores its role in local memory, between architectural heritage and social history.

External links