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Source of the Crucifix de Plumbières-les-Bains à Plombières-les-Bains dans les Vosges

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine thermal
Thermes

Source of the Crucifix de Plumbières-les-Bains

    Rue Stanislas
    88370 Plombières-les-Bains
State ownership
Crédit photo : Ji-Elle - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1614
Creation of the crucifix
1761-1762
Construction of the Arcades
5 juillet 1926
Historical monument classification
années 1930
Water redirection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Source Fountain of the Crucifix, including the grid, the crucifix and the three plates with inscription, located on the ground floor of the building of the Arcades: inscription by decree of 5 July 1926

Key figures

Stanislas (duc de Lorraine) - Sponsor Ordonna built the Arcades.
Jean-Louis Deklier Dellile - Architect Designed the house of the Arcades.
Claude Mique - Entrepreneur Completed the construction work.
André Gillot - Ironworks Author of grids and balconies.
Henri II (duc de Lorraine) - Historical figure linked Associated with the crucifix of 1614.

Origin and history

The source of the Crucifix is a thermal fountain located on the ground floor of the house of the Arcades, a building built in 1761-1762 in Plombières-les-Bains on the order of Duke Stanislas of Lorraine. This building, designed by architect Jean-Louis Deklier Dellile and entrepreneur Claude Mique, was designed to embellish the city and offer a place of pleasure to the granddaughters of Louis XV, Adélaïde and Victoire. The source, originally called Bain du Chêne, existed since the seventeenth century with a crucifix dated 1614, the time of the passage of Duke Henry II. It was transformed into a buvette and integrated into the arcades in 1762, protected by a wrought iron gate.

The house of the Arcades, of classical architecture, has a Vosges sandstone facade with ten arcades topped with medallions and an art ironwork balcony. The ironworks, including those of the grid of the source, are attributed to André Gillot, student of Jean Lamour, famous for his work at Nancy. Stanislas' weapons shield adorns the facade, recalling his role as sponsor. The spring, made up of three fountains, once served as a drink for mineral waters, now inaccessible directly.

Stanislas Street, where the monument is located, was modernized after the flood of 1770, which devastated the city. Louis XV then ordered the construction of a temperate bath and new houses, transforming the old Grande Rue into a modern artery. The source of the Crucifix, which was listed as a historic monument in 1926, bears witness to this period of urban beautification linked to the thermal importance of Plombières-les-Bains. The waters, once accessible via the fountains, have now been taken to the National Bath since the 1930s.

External links