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Hôtel de Villeroy

Hôtel de Villeroy
Hôtel de Villeroy (Paris, 1er arrondissement).JPG
Coordinates 48°51′36″N 2°20′45″E / 48.8601°N 2.3457°E / 48.8601; 2.3457Coordinates: 48°51′36″N 2°20′45″E / 48.8601°N 2.3457°E / 48.8601; 2.3457
Location Paris, France
Type hôtel particulier
Monument historique: Official French 'Monument Historique' government designation (in French)

The hôtel de Villeroy, or formerly the hôtel de la Poste is a designated monument historique building located in the 1st arrondissement of Paris, France.

The hôtel de Villeroy of the 1st arrondissement of Paris is located at 34 rue des Bourdonnais. It has a second entrance at 9 rue des Déchargeurs. At the time of its construction it bordered the rue de la Limace that was later razed to make way for the creation of the rue des Halles in 1868.

The hôtel de Villeroy is closely linked to the history of the Neufville de Villeroy family as well as the history of the Kingdom of France. The first of its buildings were erected circa 1370 on the rue des Bourdonnais side of its current location.

Under Nicolas the 4th of Neufville de Villeroy (who at the time was one of the most important ministers of the Kingdom of France) the building was elaborated, progressively becoming a center for literature. His grandson Nicolas Villeroy the 5th razed the existing buildings to rebuild them in 1640 keeping the existing cellars. The Villeroy family sold the building in 1671 to the Pajot & Rouillé family, known for their postal service business. Much later under ownership of the department store À la Belle Jardinière and in disrepair with an open pit exposed during development of the adjoining Les Halles (the pit then known as "le trou des Halles") the building space nearly became a large automotive parking lot. Thanks in part to the work of a concerned citizen the building was given monument status protection by the French Ministry of Culture in 1984 and subsequently renovated.

A key architectural feature of the building in the form of a grand staircase dating from 1640 has had its original character preserved. The building is one of the few remaining structures of the former aristocratic southwest Les Halles that during the late 16th and early 17th centuries became integrated into a dense network of bourgeois and common houses.

The building was constructed in 1640 by the Duke Nicolas de Neufville de Villeroy, the then Marshal of France. The name of the building's architect remains unknown to this day.

Nicolas V de Villeroy was raised in the court of King Louis XIII.

After the death of the King Nicolas V became a tutor for the new King the young Louis XIV starting in 1646. The young King and his brother Prince Philippe of Orleans resided in the Royal Palace but they often went to the Hotel de Villeroy where they could play with the children of Nicolas Villeroy V, Catherine Neufville de Villeroy and François de Villeroy.


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