Construction of the house XIIIe siècle (≈ 1350)
Built as a Comtal and bourgeois residence.
1703
Property of Nicolas Razulet
Property of Nicolas Razulet 1703 (≈ 1703)
Acquired by the Viscount of Saulx-Saint-Rémi.
1914-1918
Partial destruction
Partial destruction 1914-1918 (≈ 1916)
Damaged during World War I.
1923
Frontal classification on street
Frontal classification on street 1923 (≈ 1923)
Protection for historical monuments.
1933
Frontal classification on courtyard
Frontal classification on courtyard 1933 (≈ 1933)
Extension of heritage protection.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Façade sur rue (external and internal sides): classification by decree of 8 August 1923; Façade sur Cour: classification by order of 27 January 1933
Key figures
Thibaud IV (1201-1253) - Count of Champagne
Lived in the house during the sacks.
Nicolas Razulet - Vicomte de Saulx-Saint-Rémi
Owner in 1703.
Origin and history
The Hotel des Comtes de Champagne, located 22 rue de Tambour in Reims, is a 13th century Gothic residence, considered one of the oldest bourgeois houses in the city. It served as a residence for Thibaud IV (1201-1253) and the Counts of Champagne during the sacres of the kings of France, in a merchant district then very active. The rue de Tambour, the only access to the place to the sheet before the 18th century, concentrated an intense commercial activity.
The house has had several uses: property of the Viscount Nicolas Razulet in 1703, then hotel store under the name Le Coq Royal, and occupied by shops before 1914. Partly destroyed during the First World War, it was bought and restored by the Maison Taittinger under the direction of Fine Arts. Since then, it has hosted cultural events while remaining the property of the champagne brand.
Ranked a historic monument (on street in 1923 and on courtyard in 1933), the house underwent a major restoration after 1918 to reconstruct its medieval bays, replacing the old shops. Its courtyard, renovated in paved and green space, communicates with the museum-hotel Le Vergeur. The building thus illustrates the transition between medieval heritage, royal history and contemporary reuse.
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