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Municipal house in Doullens dans la Somme

Patrimoine classé
Hôtel de ville
Beffroi

Municipal house in Doullens

    Rue du Bourg
    80600 Doullens
Ownership of the municipality
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Maison communale à Doullens
Crédit photo : isamiga76 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1286
Acquisition of the seigneurial tower
1541
Bumblebee's bumblebee
1613
Last reconstruction of the belfry
1653
Conflict for the bell *Jeanne d'Auxi*
1861
Restoration with clock
1966
Historical Monument
2005
UNESCO registration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facade and street cover; tower and belfry in frame (cad. N 264): entry by order of 18 May 1966

Key figures

Cardinal de Richelieu - State and ecclesiastical man Visita Doullens in 1640 with Louis XIII.
Louis XIII - King of France Stayed in Doullens during the siege of Arras.
Louis XIV - King of France Visited the belfry in 1678 with the Dauphin.

Origin and history

The communal house of Doullens, incorporating a belfry of 28 meters, was built between the 16th and 17th centuries. Acquired by the commune in 1286 from a seigneurial tower, it was rebuilt several times after fires, with a last major restoration in 1613. The belfry, characteristic of picardic architecture in brick and stone, houses three bells, including the bumblebee Jeanne d'Auxi (1541), the object of a historical dispute between Doullens and Auxi-le-Château after its capture by the Spaniards in 1653.

The monument welcomed notable figures such as Cardinal de Richelieu and Louis XIII in 1640 during the siege of Arras, and Louis XIV and the Dauphin in 1678. In 1861, its upper part was restored with the addition of a clock. The façade, cover, and belfry were protected by a 1966 order. Ranked a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2005 among the Belgian and French Belfries, it symbolizes the medieval communal autonomy and the turbulent history of Picardia.

Architecturally, the belfry rises on four levels: a stone ground floor with a porch and raised doors, a left guard corps (former prison becoming now the tourist office), and a bent summit sheltering the watchman's heal. Its style combines Gothic and regional influences, typical of the brick buildings of northern France in the 17th–18th century.

The Joan of Auxi, an iconic bell melted in 1541, still rings every hour. Its history reflects local tensions: stolen by the Spaniards in 1653, it was bought by Doullens after negotiations with Auxi-le-Château. This monument, a communal property, remains a major witness to the Picardic heritage and its role in civic life since the Middle Ages.

External links