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Fleurance Town Hall dans le Gers

Patrimoine classé
Hôtel de ville
Halle
Halle-mairie
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Halle-hôtel de ville de Fleurance
Crédit photo : PMRMaeyaert - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1800
1900
2000
1272
Fondation de Fleurance
1833
Fire of the medieval hall
1834-1837
Current construction
14 mai 1987
Historic Monument Protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Halle-Hôtel de Ville, with the four corner fountains (excluding the halls of the Town Hall) (Box BW 418): inscription by order of 14 May 1987

Key figures

Ardenne - Austrian architect Manufacturer of the city hall.
Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse - Sculptor of fountains Author of the four seasonal statues.
Géraud de Cazaubon - Count of Gaure Founder of Fleurance in 1272.

Origin and history

Fleurance City Hall replaces a medieval building destroyed by fire in 1833. Designed by the Austrian architect Ardenne between 1834 and 1837, it rises on the historic central square of this 13th century bastide, founded as the capital of Gaure County. The neo-classical, square, one-storey building is based on arches in the middle of the wall housing the market, while the floor is home to municipal halls organized around an inner courtyard covered with a lantern. Four bronze statues, representing the seasons and made by Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse, adorn the corners of the hall, adding an artistic dimension to this public space.

Fleurance, a model gasconne bastide with its marble plan centered on the hall, experienced a turbulent history: looting during the Hundred Years' War, execution of its consuls in 1465, and economic development thanks to the textile industry (serge de Fleurance) and then distilleries and tileries in the 18th to 19th centuries. The destruction of the ramparts in 1777 and the fire of 1833 marked a turning point, leading to the reconstruction of the city hall as a symbol of modernity. Ranked a historic monument in 1987 (excluding municipal halls), it reflects the architectural adaptation of the bastides to the administrative and commercial needs of the 19th century.

The site, in the probable location of an old communal house, incorporates structural innovations: square pillars supporting arcades, arches diaphragm under the halls, and a straight staircase leading to the first floor. The fountains, added in the 19th century, reflect the urban beautification linked to the economic boom of Fleurance, then connected to the railway network (1865) and equipped with public lighting. The hall, the heart of social life since the Middle Ages, thus embodies the transition between a medieval fortified city and a modern administrative city, while maintaining its function as a community gathering place.

External links