Construction of house 1670 (≈ 1670)
Edited by Hans Jacob Siegler, butcher and innkeeper.
2e moitié du XVIIe siècle
Construction period
Construction period 2e moitié du XVIIe siècle (≈ 1750)
Postwar context of Thirty Years.
16 octobre 1930
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 16 octobre 1930 (≈ 1930)
Registration of facades and roof.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Facades and Roofing: By Order of 16 October 1930
Key figures
Hans Jacob Siegler - Builder and owner
Boucher and innkeeper, owner of the building.
Origin and history
Siegler House, located on No. 2 Church Street in Bouxwiller (Bas-Rhin), is a typical example of Alsatian civil architecture in the second half of the seventeenth century. Built in 1670 by butcher Hans Jacob Siegler, it is distinguished by its trapezoidal plan, its two floors in corbellation and its gable loggia protected by a half-croup. The facades, richly carved, combine atrial motifs, various heads and a finely-worked curule chair, while the cornel post on the first floor features a lansquenet in high relief. This baroque decor, characteristic of the region, contrasts with the subsequent modifications of the ground floor, where the old door windows have given way to a commercial window.
Hans Jacob Siegler, both builder of the building and owner of the hostel At the Charrue, embodied the local bourgeoisie of the time. The house, which has been listed as historic monuments since 1930, illustrates the know-how of Alsatian artisans, including its mixed balusters (squares and turns) and its wooden staircase with twisted core. The latrines on the venal side and the buried cellar are reminiscent of medieval urban constraints, while the closed windows on the floors show later functional evolutions. The building, although redesigned on the ground floor, retains a remarkable stylistic unit, reflecting the fascist of the patrician houses of Alsace after Renaissance.
Classified for its facades and roof, Siegler House is situated in a historical context marked by the reconstruction after the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), when Bouxwiller, then under German influence, experienced an economic boom. Its hybrid architecture, combining Gothic traditions (corbellations) and Baroque ornaments (early motifs), symbolizes the stylistic transition of the period. Today, the building remains a major testimony of the Alsatian civil heritage, associated with the daily life of the corporations — butchers and innkeepers — which structured the urban society of the Old Regime.
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