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Wangen Manor à Wilwisheim dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir

Wangen Manor

    Rue du Château
    67270 Wilwisheim
Private property; property of the municipality
Manoir de Wangen
Manoir de Wangen
Manoir de Wangen
Manoir de Wangen
Crédit photo : © Ralph Hammann - Wikimedia Commons - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1651
Acquisition of the seigneury
1669
Construction of the mansion
1789
Departure of Wangen
1826
Change of ownership
2003
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Entrance gate and north fence wall with its gate; wall (remaining vestiges); access bridge; vestige of the fountain; main house bodies, in total, including exterior coatings and interior decorations; facades and roofs of western and eastern outbuildings, with chapel (cad. 5 54/20, 63/20, 65/20, 66/20): registration by order of 30 October 2003

Key figures

Jean-Louis Albert de Wangen - Lord and sponsor Fits build the mansion in 1669.
Mathias Étienne Picquart - Post-revolutionary acquirer Supplier of the armies, owner in 1826.
Famille Bois-David - Owners (1826–70) Used the chapel with episcopal permission.

Origin and history

Wangen's mansion, located in Wilwisheim in the Lower Rhine, was built in the 3rd quarter of the 17th century (1669) by Jean-Louis Albert de Wangen, lord of the village since 1651. It probably replaced an older castle, with traces such as a ditch and an access bridge. The estate initially included a large park, ponds, and outbuildings organized around a courtyard, with a chapel at the east end. Together, typical of Alsatian seigneurial residences, mixed residential, agricultural and religious functions.

The manor house, which was listed as a historical monument in 2003, retains remarkable architectural elements: a sandstone portal surmounted by globes, a moulure cornice, and an interior staircase made of carved baluster oak. The outbuildings, partially renovated, housed a chapel adorned with a gate in the middle of the hangar and an oculus. At the Revolution, Wangen's family left, and the estate was sold to Mathias Étienne Picquart, a supplier of armies, and then to the Bois-David family (1826–70), who used the chapel with the permission of the bishop of Strasbourg.

In the 19th century, the mansion became a farm, undergoing transformations (partial demolition of outbuildings, sale of decorative elements like a fountain statue or the chapel bell). The interiors, once richly decorated (lambing, 18th century chimneys), have now disappeared. Despite its inscription, the building is in a worrying state of conservation, with partial ruins and a major loss of its original decor. The historic parcel, though small, retains the traces of the park and the original ponds.

Protected remains include the main house body, outbuilding facades, access bridge, north fence wall, and traces of the fountain. The site, a private property, illustrates the evolution of a rural seigneury in agriculture, reflecting the social and economic upheavals of Alsace between the 17th and 20th centuries.

External links