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House à Richelieu en Indre-et-Loire

House

    4 Rue Saint Vincent de Paul
    37120 Richelieu
Private property

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1632
Construction of house
XVIIe siècle
Foundation of the city
1992
Monument protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts and roofs of the main house body, including the porch; staircase in masonry, then in wood, located in the main house body (cad. C 109, 121, 1089): entry by order of 21 February 1992

Key figures

Cardinal de Richelieu - City commander Turned his native village into a city.
Jacques Lemercier - Architect Designs the city and this house.
Henri de Sourdis - Initial owner Archbishop of Bordeaux, sponsor.
Jean Thiriot - Entrepreneur Realized the construction in 1632.

Origin and history

The house in Richelieu, built in the seventeenth century, is part of the ambitious urban project of Cardinal Richelieu. The latter transformed his native village into an ideal city, designed by architect Jacques Lemercier. The regular plan, with ditches, walls and symmetrical streets, reflected the principles of classical urban planning of the time. The houses, aligned and standardized, were to embody the order and greatness desired by the cardinal.

This small three-span pavilion, with a central porch, included a shop on the square and a staircase serving the floor. Built in 1632 for Henri de Sourdis, archbishop of Bordeaux, he followed Lemercier's plans and was made by entrepreneur Jean Thiriot. The ensemble, though degraded today, illustrates the architectural unity imposed by Richelieu. A dwelling at the bottom of the courtyard, added in the eighteenth century, bears witness to later evolutions.

The façades, roofs and staircases in masonry and wood were protected by a registration order in 1992. This monument reflects both the fascist of the new city and subsequent adaptations, while maintaining the traces of Lemercier's initial project. Localization, Place du Marché, confirms its role in the commercial and social life of Richelieu.

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