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Hotel Sardini in Blois dans le Loir-et-Cher

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Hotel particulier classé

Hotel Sardini in Blois

    7 Rue du Puits-Châtel
    41000 Blois
Private property
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Hôtel Sardini à Blois
Crédit photo : Real politik - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Vers 1560
Acquisition by Scipion Sardini
XVe-XVIe siècle (4e quart XVe - 1er quart XVIe)
Initial construction
XIXe siècle
Major transformations
1927
Registration historical monument
1963
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Hotel excluding parties classified: registration by order of 29 December 1927; All facades and roofs, small oratory decorated with paintings, fireplace inside (Box DO 377): classification by order of 11 September 1963

Key figures

Pierre Bernelet - Initial sponsor Owner responsible for the construction.
Scipion Sardini - Banker and owner Acquiert the hotel around 1560.
Catherine de Médicis - Queen Regent Close to Sardini, stayed in Blois.
Louis XII - King of France Reigns during construction.

Origin and history

Hotel Sardini is an iconic building in the centre of Blois, built in the 16th century under the reign of Louis XII for Pierre Bernlet. Its architecture combines late Gothic influences and Renaissance motifs, as evidenced by the Italianising arabesques of its gallery, inspired by the Louis XII wing gallery of Blois Castle. The building also maintains a painted-walled oratory and a fireplace decorated in the style of Fontainebleau School, added or modified over the centuries.

Acquired around 1560 by the Italian banker Scipion Sardini, close to Catherine de Medici, the hotel reflects the cultural exchanges between France and Italy during the Renaissance. The Queen, who frequently stayed in Blois, probably influenced her layout. Despite transformations in the 19th century (deletion of a wing and decorations), the hotel preserved major elements such as its stair tower, its inner courtyard, and wall paintings dating from the 4th quarter of the 15th or early 16th century. The latter, along with the missing painted woodwork, illustrate the transition between the flamboyant Gothic and the First Renaissance.

Ranked a historic monument in 1963 (façades, roofs, oratory and fireplace) and registered since 1927 for the rest of the building, the Hotel Sardini remains a private property. Its legal protection guarantees the preservation of its interior and exterior decorations, including carved dolphins and horns, local interpretation of Italian motifs. The site, located 7 rue du Puits-Châtel, neighbouring with other private hotels such as the Vareilles hotel, in a historic area marked by the urban boom of Blois in the Renaissance.

Successive restorations maintained the integrity of the building, although some parts ( stables, commons) disappeared when the plot was reduced in the 19th century. The museum, the monumental fireplace and the remains of the gallery open today bear witness to its past prestige. The Hotel Sardini thus embodies the mixture of styles and influences that characterized the French Renaissance, between medieval heritage and Italianising innovations.

External links