Hotel de Sens, Paris – not as it seems


Hotel de Sens, Paris – not as it seems.

The Hotel de Sens in the 4th arrondissement of Marais in Paris, France, is not as it seems. It is not a hotel. 

The Hotel de Sens is a medieval mansion that now holds the Forney Art Library.

It was built as a hotel in 1345 for the archbishops of Sens. It was later called the Hotel Saint-Pol, the royal residence of Charles V, King of France. Subsequently, the kings of France lived in the newly-built Louvre Palace, and the Hotel Saint-Pol was destroyed. 

Tristian de Salazar built the current hotel on the same site between 1475-1519 for the archbishops of Sens again. 

At 1 rue du Figuier – The Fig Tree Road – it is said that one of the owners of the building, Margaret of Valois cut a fig tree in 1605 or 1606 in front of her home, giving the street its name.

In 1797, it was sold and privately owned as a home, shop, workshop, and factory over the years. It became a heritage site in 1862, when the city of Paris bought it. It was restored in 1930 and the Forney Art Library was established in the building in 1961. It continues to keep the name, Hotel de Sens. 

Published by MaNi

Martina Nicolls is an Australian author and international human rights-based consultant in education, healing and wellbeing, peace and stabilisation, and foreign aid audits and evaluations. She has written eight books and continues writing articles and thoughts through her various websites. She loves photography, reading, and nature. She currently lives in Paris, France.

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