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Place d'Alliance de Nancy en Meurthe-et-Moselle

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine urbain
Place
Meurthe-et-Moselle

Place d'Alliance de Nancy

    Place d'Alliance
    54100 Nancy
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Place dAlliance de Nancy 
Crédit photo : Axel41 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1698
Dismantling of ramparts
1751
Start of work
1756
Franco-Austrian Treaty
1763
Planting of lime trees
1782
Fire at the Alsace hotel
1925
Classification of the fountain
1983
UNESCO classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

La Fontaine : classification by decree of 15 January 1925 - The ground and plantations of the square: inscription by decree of 25 February 1950

Key figures

Stanislas Leszczynski - Duke of Lorraine and Bar Sponsor of the square and its urban complex.
Emmanuel Héré - Architect Designer of the square and its uniform facades.
Paul-Louis Cyfflé - Sculptor Author of the Treaty Memorial Fountain.
Jean Lamour - Folder error Creator of wrought iron railings.
Marie-Thérèse d'Autriche - Empress and Duchess of Lorraine Signatory of the Treaty of 1756 honored by the place.
Louis XV - King of France Co-signatory to the Franco-Austrian Treaty.

Origin and history

The Place d'Alliance, located in Nancy in the Charles III district, was built in the 1750s under the impulse of Stanislas Leszczynski, Duke of Lorraine. Designed by architect Emmanuel Heré, it is part of a classic urban complex including Place Stanislas and Place de la Carrière, now classified at UNESCO. Originally planned to honor Saint Stanislas, she was finally named in tribute to the Franco-Austrian alliance treaty of 1756, sealing a political reconciliation between Louis XV and Marie-Thérèse of Austria.

The central fountain, the work of sculptor Paul-Louis Cyfflé, commemorates this treatise by river allegories (Escaut, Meuse, Rhine) and Latin currencies celebrating concord. Inspired by the fountain of the Four Rivers of Bernini in Rome, it is surmounted by an obelisk crowned by a genius. Centennial lime trees, planted in 1763, and private hotels with uniform facades – financed by Stanislas but built by their owners – reinforce the architectural unity of the place.

The square experienced revolutionary rebaptisations ("Place de la Renommée", "place Chalier") and a devastating fire in 1782, which ravaged the hotel of Alsace, property of the Marquis d'Alsace. Several hotels, including the Bank of France in the 19th century, are now protected as historical monuments. Classified with its plantations in 1950 and registered at UNESCO in 1983, the square embodies the urban heritage of the Enlightenment in Lorraine.

The architectural ensemble, marked by arcades, wrought iron guardrails signed by Jean Lamour and bas-reliefs celebrating Stanislas, illustrates the influence of French classicism. The square, surrounded by a roadway, remains a place of memory and walking, served by the Neancan tramway. Its history reflects the political and artistic stakes of the 18th century, between European alliances and the cultural influence of Lorraine.

External links