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and father-in-law of the maréchal-duc d'Aumont, governor of Paris, found the old structure, on three adjoining properties, which he had assembled between 1619 and 1630, too old-fashioned for his requirements; though he had erected a party wall and constructed the left half of the present
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At the beginning of the fifteenth century there was on part of this site a property at the Sign of the Die, belonging to the family of
Cousinot, magistrates. In 1644 Michel-Antoine Scarron, conseiller du roi, and uncle of the burlesque poet
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Four ducs d'Aumont in succession lived at the hôtel, until the death in 1743 of
Victoire-Félicité de Durfort, the wife of Louis-Marie-Augustin d'Aumont (1709–1782), who had married her in 1727: he sold the hôtel d'Aumont in 1756.
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When the new building was completed in 1648, it was the duc d'Aumont who came to inhabit it, and he bought it outright from his father-in-law in 1656. For him it was enlarged and enriched by the architect
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of the salons formed backgrounds to a variety of offices and storerooms. A history of the hôtel was issued, however, in 1903.
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The street front in the rue de Jouy presents a symmetrical, austerely unornamented range of two-storey buildings with a
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Michel-Antoine
Scarron, seigneur de Vaures et de Vaujour (Constance Tooth, "The Early Private Houses of Louis Le Vau",
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with a pair of slightly projecting pavilions flanking the central three bays to break the long façade.
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of Paris has been housed in it. A radical restoration of the decayed framework was completed in 1964.
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Later, at the beginning of the eighteenth century, interior modernizations resulted in the present
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From 1802 until 1824, the building, in its commanding public situation, was rented to house the
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138:. The mason on-site, overseeing the new constructions was Michel Villedo. The name of
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as early as 1631, he rebuilt and extended it to create the present structure, built
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This phase of the house is documented in the series of engravings collected as the
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Several proprietors followed in succession: Charles Sandrié, attached to the
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Under the direction of M. Le
Tournon and M. Jouve (Tooth 1967:515 note 23).
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leading between ranges of stabling to the entrance court and matching end
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until 1780. The Hôtel d'Aumont was sold by his heirs in 1795.
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Buildings and structures in the 4th arrondissement of Paris
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of three storeys, crowned with tall sloping slate roofs
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290:No. 774 (September 1967:510-518) p. 515, and plan.
245:, which are pierced with pedimented dormers. The
207:In 1938, the Hôtel d’Aumont was purchased by the
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160:, currently the office of the president of the
404:Buildings and structures completed in 1648
264:) combines the end pavilions in a unified
324:"Marguerite Villedo et son trio d'hommes"
64:Garden front of the Hôtel d'Aumont, Paris
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251:is enclosed by the five-bay principal
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336:La Pharmacie centrale de France
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409:1648 establishments in France
179:and procureur général of the
399:Hôtels particuliers in Paris
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80:4th arrondissement of Paris
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299:Tooth 1967:515, and plan.
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16:Building in Paris, France
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340:Anciens hôtels de Paris
285:The Burlington Magazine
219:tribunal administratif
162:tribunal administratif
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375:48.85444°N 2.35833°E
118:, to the designs of
115:entre cour et jardin
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214:monument historique
142:is attached to its
40:General information
260:The garden front (
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380:48.85444; 2.35833
342:(1910), pp 161ff.
334:Charles Sellier,
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243:à la française
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194:arrondissement
182:Cour des aides
146:à la française
140:André Le Nôtre
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311:Petit Marot
177:abbé Terray
136:Simon Vouet
92:River Seine
393:Categories
363:48°51′16″N
231:rusticated
366:2°21′30″E
239:pavilions
202:boiseries
262:pictured
45:Location
192:of the
144:garden
98:History
190:mairie
88:Marais
53:France
272:Notes
151:Seine
49:Paris
134:and
68:The
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