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Courthouse or Conciergerie à Paris 1er dans Paris 1er

Patrimoine classé
Palais de justice
Paris

Courthouse or Conciergerie

    Boulevard du Palais
    75001 Paris 1er Arrondissement
State ownership
Palais de justice de Paris
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Palais de Justice ou Conciergerie
Crédit photo : Nitot - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Xe-XIVe siècle
Residence of the kings of France
1618
Fire from the Grand Hall
1776
Bigonnet Fire and Grid
1793-1795
Revolutionary Tribunal
1840-1871
Expansions under Napoleon III
2018
Relocation of TGI
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

This building is part of the National Estate of the Palais de la Cité established by Decree No. 2021-1174 of 10 September 2021. The interior parts were classified as historic monuments in full and automatically by this decree.

Key figures

Charles V - King of France Transfer the royal residence to Hotel Saint-Pol.
Salomon de Brosse - Architect Reconstructs the Great Hall after 1618.
Joseph-Louis Duc - Architect Directs enlargements under Napoleon III.
Honoré Daumet - Architect Reconstructed after the fire of 1871.
Philippe Joseph Henri Lemaire - Sculptor Author of the statues of Charlemagne and Philippe Auguste (1860).
Dominique Perrault - Contemporary architect Proposes a redevelopment in 2016.

Origin and history

The Palais de Justice de Paris, located on the island of La Cité, is the heir of the ancient curia regis, seat of royal power from the 10th to the 14th century. It now houses the Court of Cassation, the Court of Appeal of Paris and the Court of Special Assizes. The site, originally residence of the kings of France (like Charles V before his transfer to the Hotel Saint-Pol), preserves medieval remains: the Conciergerie, the Sainte-Chapelle, and historical rooms like the Grand-Salle. The judicial institutions (Parliament of Paris, Chamber of Accounts) remained there after the departure of the kings.

The Palace suffered several notable fires: in 1601 (destruction of the statues of the kings of France), 1618 (Grandsalle rebuilt by Salomon de Brosse), 1630 (arrow of the Sainte-Chapelle), and 1776 (part between Conciergerie and Sainte-Chapelle). The neo-classical façade of the Courtyard of May, with its golden grid of Bigonnet (1776), dates from 1783-1786. During the Revolution he housed the Revolutionary Tribunal (1793-1795), then replaced by the Court of Cassation.

Under the Restoration and monarchy of July, the Palace is enlarged to respond to the increase in judicial affairs. The architects Huyot, then Duc and Dommey, carried out colossal works from 1840, interrupted by the revolution of 1848. Napoleon III revived them, but the fire of 1871 (Commune de Paris) destroyed a quarter of the work. The reconstruction, entrusted to Honoré Daumet after 1879, was gradually completed. In 1907, demolitions allowed an extension by Albert Tournaire.

In the 20th century, the Palace became a central judicial symbol, hosting until 2018 the Tribunal de grande instance (moved in the 17th arrondissement). The southern façade, marked by the bullets of the Liberation (1944), and the glass window cracked during an escape in 1975 testify to its turbulent history. Since 2016, redevelopment projects (Dominique Perrault, Philippe Bélaval) aim to open the site to the public, linking Conciergerie and Sainte-Chapelle with covered spaces, while modernizing judicial premises.

Today, the Palace welcomes 13,000 daily visitors and houses places of detention (the "deposit", the "mousemaker"). There is still a popular film venue (Le Clan des Sicilians, J'accuse de Polanski) and a heritage issue, with renovations planned until 2040. In 2020-2021, the Public Lobby hosted historical trials (2015 attacks, Mediator case).

External links