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Hôtel Saint-Georges in Vannes dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé
Morbihan

Hôtel Saint-Georges in Vannes

    Rue des Orfèvres
    56000 Vannes
Hôtel Saint-Georges à Vannes
Hôtel Saint-Georges à Vannes
Hôtel Saint-Georges à Vannes
Hôtel Saint-Georges à Vannes
Hôtel Saint-Georges à Vannes
Hôtel Saint-Georges à Vannes
Crédit photo : Yodaspirine - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1749
Purchased by Jean Guitern du Defaye
1762
Sale to Pierre Charpentier de Lanvaux
1790-1800
Revolutionary requisition
1802
Visit of Bishop of Pancemont
1er quart du XVIIIe siècle
Construction of the current hotel
1er mars 1945
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Street facades, roof, old woodwork on the first floor and stairway (Box K 2011): inscription by order of 1 March 1945

Key figures

Jean Guitern du Defaye - Ordinary doctor of the King Owner in 1757, renovated the hotel
Pierre Jean-Baptiste Louis Charpentier de Lanvaux - Lord and Owner Modifies neoclassical facades at the end of the 18th century
Mgr de Pancemont - Consisting Bishop of Vannes Hotel occupied in 1802
Edmond Ferrary - Caterer and confectioner Owner in the 19th century
Famille Harscouët de Saint-Georges - 19th Century Owners Give your name to the hotel

Origin and history

The hotel Saint-Georges is a former mansion located in Vannes, Morbihan, built in the 1st quarter of the 18th century on the site of a 17th century building destroyed at the end of the same century. It originally belonged to the Lenvos Charpentier family and was requisitioned during the French Revolution to house the officers of the General Staff. In 1802 he temporarily welcomed Bishop de Pancemont, bishop concordataire of Vannes, before his official installation at the convent of the Carmelites. In the 19th century, the hotel passed into the hands of Edmond Ferrary, a renowned caterer, and then of the Harscouët family of Saint-Georges, who gave it its present name.

The hotel architecture, sober and classic, is distinguished by its three levels: a granite ground floor, white stone floors, and a facade on Rue des Orfèvres covered with tuffeau. The walled openings, wrought iron balconies, and triangular pediments animate the facades. Inside, a wooden staircase of the seventeenth century, vestige of the original building, coexists with old woodwork on the first floor. The courtyard, paved and lined with two asymmetric wings, preserves an historic kitchen with its granite fireplace, accessible from a venal leading to rue de la Monnaie.

Ranked a historic monument since 1 March 1945, the hotel protects its street façades, roof, first floor woodwork and staircase. The archives reveal a complex evolution: built between 1677 and 1757, probably at the end of the seventeenth century, it was modified in the eighteenth century in a neo-classical style by Pierre Jean-Baptiste Louis Charpentier, seigneur of Lanvaux. Requisitioned during the Revolution, it also houses a monitoring committee. In the 19th century, transformations adapted its stables into shops, while the Saint-Georges family ascribed its name.

Sources also mention prominent owners, such as Jean Guitern du Defaye, doctor of the King in 1757, or Pierre Grimon, doctor of medicine who sold the hotel in 1762. The cadastral archives finally evoke Edmond Ferrary, a medal-winning pastry maker, who arranges a vegetable garden on the second floor for his culinary preparations. The hotel thus illustrates the evolution of the uses of an aristocratic building, moving from private residence to revolutionary power, then to artisanal and commercial space.

Today, the Hotel Saint-Georges remains a testimony of the civil architecture of the eighteenth century valveese, mixing classic sobriety and ornamental details, while bearing the traces of the social and political transformations of modern Brittany.

External links