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Rothembourg Hotel - Paris 6th à Paris 1er dans Paris 6ème

Patrimoine classé
Hotel particulier classé
Paris

Rothembourg Hotel - Paris 6th

    5 Rue du Regard
    75006 Paris 6e Arrondissement
Hôtel de Rothembourg - Paris 6ème
Hôtel de Rothembourg - Paris 6ème
Crédit photo : Mbzt - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1728
Construction of hotel
1735
Death of Rothemburg
1790
National good
1806
Orphanship
1908
Disappearance from the garden
1963
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The façade on Raspail Boulevard; the façade on the courtyard; covers ; the vantals of the door on Rue du Regard : inscription by order of 1 October 1963

Key figures

Conrad Alexandre de Rothembourg - Prussian officer First occupant, eponymous hotel.
Victor-Thierry Dailly - Architect Designed the hotel in 1728.
Antoine Caracciolo - Ambassador of Sicily Busy from 1736 to 1739.
Jean Sébastien de Kerhoent - Marquis de Coetanfao Busy until 1746.
Duc de Croÿ-Solre - Marshal of France Tenant until 1784.
Anne-Emmanuel de Croÿ - Duke of Croÿ Last occupied before emigration.

Origin and history

The hotel of Rothembourg is a Parisian mansion built in 1728 on a plot close to the Carmelite convent, at the request of the latter. The architect Victor-Thierry Dailly directs the realization. Originally designed as a report building, it is located at 5 rue du Regard and 68 boulevard Raspail, in the 6th arrondissement. His name comes from his first occupant, Conrad Alexandre de Rothembourg, a former Prussian officer who died in 1735.

Between 1736 and 1739, the hotel houses Antoine Caracciolo, ambassador of the king of Sicily, then Jean Sébastien de Kerhoent, Marquis de Coetanfao, until his death in 1746. His widow, Catherine de Rougé, remarried to the Duke of Elbeuf, lived there until 1753. The hotel was then rented to the Duke of Croÿ-Solre, Marshal of France, and then to his son, Anne-Emmanuel of Croÿ, until their emigration during the Revolution. In 1790 it became a national property and served as an annex to the National Warden to keep tapestries and books.

From 1806, the hotel was transformed into an orphanage by the Dames de Saint-Benoît. Retrieved by the state in 1828, it was sold in 1835. His garden disappeared in 1908 when Raspail Boulevard was drilled. Since 1963, its facades and covers have been listed as historical monuments, bearing witness to its 18th century architecture and its turbulent history.

The building illustrates the urban transformations of Paris, moving from an aristocratic residence to public use and then charitable. Its inscription in 1963 protects key elements such as the courtyard façade, the one overlooking Raspail Boulevard, and the vantals of the door on Rue du Regard.

External links