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Hotel Romé in Rouen en Seine-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Seine-Maritime

Hotel Romé in Rouen

    14 Rue des Carmes
    76000 Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Hôtel Romé à Rouen
Crédit photo : Nortmannus - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1525
Construction of hotel
1589
Sale to the Royal Administration
1591
Installation of the Court of Auditors
12 juillet 1886
Historical monument classification
1944
Partial destruction
30 mai 1976
Resettlement of remains
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The former Chamber of Accounts: classification by order of 12 July 1886

Key figures

Nicolas de Romé - Lord of Fresquienne and king's adviser Owner before the sale to the royal administration in 1589.

Origin and history

Hotel Romé is a former mansion located in Rouen, built around 1525 in the style of the First Renaissance. Although the original sponsor remains unknown, the building is associated with Nicolas de Romé, lord of Fresquienne and king's adviser, who sold it to the royal administration in 1589. The latter established the Court of Auditors in 1591, marking its institutional importance. The hotel was classified as a historic monument in 1886, but underwent transformations in the 19th century and restoration in the 1920s by the Mutuelles du Mans.

The 1944 bombing almost completely destroyed the Hotel Romé. Only the remains of a courtyard façade, including a ground floor and a floor, are saved. Demonstrated and then reassembled in 1976 near the cathedral square, they are integrated into the Claude Monet Cathedral space after the demolition of the former congress hall. Today, these elements, decorated and partially restored, bear witness to the Renaissance architecture of Rouenne.

The loggia of the hotel, initially transformed into a chapel and then passing between the streets of Carmes and Saint-Romain, was remarkable for its vaults. Destroyed in 1944 and finally in the 1970s, only two decorated abutments remain. These remains, though fragmentary, illustrate the functional and architectural evolution of the building, from its construction to its partial destruction during the Second World War.

External links