Acquisition by nuns 1530 (≈ 1530)
Purchase by the nuns of the Etanche (Rollainville)
1537
Partial reconstruction
Partial reconstruction 1537 (≈ 1537)
Date worn on the lintel (body to yard)
1704
Construction of stairs
Construction of stairs 1704 (≈ 1704)
Staircase out of date work
1724
Reconstruction of the body on the street
Reconstruction of the body on the street 1724 (≈ 1724)
First half of the 18th century (local source)
1795
Sale as a national good
Sale as a national good 1795 (≈ 1795)
Following the emigration of religious owners
19 janvier 2000
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 19 janvier 2000 (≈ 2000)
Registration by decree (façades, roofs, interior elements)
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Facades and roofs; Stairs-outwork dated 1704; door lintel of the building on courtyard dated 1537; rooms on the ground floor of the house (Box AB 155): inscription by order of 19 January 2000
Key figures
Religieuses de l'Etanche - Initial owners
Acquerous in 1530, convent of Rollainville
Origin and history
This house located in Neufchâteau, in the Great East, presents a complex architectural history, mixing several periods. The body on courtyard, dated 1537 by an engraved lintel, bears witness to its Renaissance origin, while the outwork staircase, built in 1704, marks a first baroque transformation. The body on street, rebuilt in the 18th century (circa 1724 according to a local source), finished giving the building its present appearance, characteristic of the urban dwellings of the time.
The house was originally acquired in 1530 by the nuns of the Etanche, a convent in Rollainville, before being rebuilt or deeply transformed in 1537. After the Revolution in 1795, the property was sold as a national property following the emigration of its religious owners. The ground floor preserves remarkable elements of the 18th century, including painted oak panels and a stone chimney with stumped hood, reflecting the refinement of the bourgeois interiors of the time.
Classified as a Historic Monument by order of 19 January 2000, the house protects its facades, roofs, as well as the interior and exterior elements dated (scaling of 1704, lintel of 1537). Today, private property, it illustrates the architectural and social evolution of Neufchâteau, from the wars of Religion to the revolutionary period, through the urban transformations of the Enlightenment century.
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