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Charles Chamois

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Chamois (c. 1610 – after 1684) was a 17th-century French architect from Paris.

Without being an innovator as was Louis Le Vau at the same period, Chamois remained adept at a simple but effective architecture, without superfluous ornamentation.

Biography

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Inner courtyard of the hôtel de Lauzun, circa 1656-1659
The hôtel particulier at 52 rue de Turenne in Paris is the work of Charles Chamois (right in the foreground)

Around 1630, Chamois built Nicolas Moret's house at 27 rue Saint-Sulpice [fr] (Hôtel de Fougères), in Paris.

On 18 June 1633, Chamois rented for 6 years a small house located "rue des Orties, près des Galeries du Louvre", for "100 livres tournois of annual rent".[1] He was then called "Architecte du Roi, bourgeois de Paris", before taking the title "architecte des bâtiments du roi" in 1640.

Around 1640-42, he worked on the house of Sieur Galland, rue des Haudriettes [fr] in Paris. In 1641, Chamois had a hotel built for Jacques Mérault at 52 rue de Turenne [fr], Paris.[2]

On 18 July 1642, he concluded an estimate and masonry contract for the construction of a double main building and wing in return on a square "rue du Coulombier" (rue du Colombier [fr]), belonging to Marie Ferrant, in return for 19,800 livres.[3][4][5]

In 1645, he worked on the hotel of Gaspard de Fieubet, 20 place des Vosges. From those years on, he was a close acquaintance of André Le Nôtre.

In 1647, he could be found on the hôtel particulier of Henri de Guénégaud, rue des Francs-Bourgeois in Paris.

On 23 April 1648, he signed with the mason Jean Savaria, "residing together rue des Galeries du Louvre", a contract and estimate of masonry, modified on following 30 April, for the construction "of a large double main building, in place of a deciduous, on a square having exit on the rue des Deux-Boules [fr] and rue des Mauvaises-Paroles [fr]", for the benefit of François Roger, King's adviser.[6]

An act of 11 November 1650 mentions a "transport" concerning François Chamois, husband of Marguerite Poisson, an act in which Charles Chamois intervened.[7] Was it about his parents?

In the years 1656-1657, Chamois built the Hôtel de Lauzun, on the île Saint-Louis in Paris, for Charles Gruyn des Bordes, a financier quickly enriched under Cardinal Mazarin.[8]

In 1659, he bore the title of "engineer and architect of the king's buildings" and "councillor".

Meanwhile, from 1650 and practically until the end of his life[9] he worked for the Le Tellier family to the realization of the château de Chaville [fr], located between Meudon and Versailles[10] with the collaboration of André Le Nôtre, whom he had known for many years. The construction of this château for one of the most important ministers of the early reign of Louis XIV can be considered a consecration of his career. For the future chancellor, he also exercised his talents for the hotel Le Tellier in Paris (at 39-45 rue des Francs-Bourgeois), still preserved.

In 1669, he worked on the Hôtel Louvois, rue de Richelieu in Paris, for Louis XIV's minister.

In 1671, he was "intendant des places frontières du royaume".

In 1674, he was finally appointed "contrôleur des fortifications des places conquises".

Main works

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Civilian architecture

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Religious architecture

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Bibliography

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  • Marie-Agnès Férault, Charles Chamois, architecte parisien du XVIIe siècle, 1981, mémoire de maîtrise soutenu à l'Université Paris IV Sorbonne.
  • Marie-Agnès Férault, Charles Chamois : architecte parisien (c. 1610-after 1684), p. 117-153, in Bulletin monumental, 1990, volume 148, No 2 Read online

References

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  1. ^ Archives nationales, MC/ET/XXIV/338, fol. IX/XX/VI en ligne
  2. ^ "Ville de Paris – Direction du Patrimoine et de l'Architecture / La Gare Architectes : 52 Rue de Turenne" (PDF). Etudeshistoriques-rea.com. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  3. ^ Archives nationales, MC/ET/VI/465, 18 July 1642.
  4. ^ Archives nationales, MC/ET/VI/466, Minutes and directories of the notary Etienne Leroy, receipt of Charles Chamois, architect of the King's buildings to Marie Ferrand, widow of Nicolas Guichard, 11 April 1643.
  5. ^ Marie-Agnès Férault : Charles Chamois, architecte parisien (vers 1620-après 1684, Bulletin Monumental, year 1990, vol. 148, No 2 / p. 120, includes an essai de reconstitution des plans (rez-de-chaussée et premier étage), coupes et élévations (sur rue et sur cour) de la maison de Marie Guichard, d’après le devis du 18 juillet 1642 et le plan cadastral de 1830-1832 in Paris, rue du Colombier – Read online
  6. ^ Archives nationales, MC/ET/XXIV/430, fol IX/XX/VI. Marché de maçonnerie § Devis et... par Jean Savaria, maçon, Charles Chamois, architecte des bâtiments du roi, demeurant ensemble rue des Galeries du Louvre, à François Roger, conseiller du roi, pour la construction d'un grand corps de logis double, à la place d'un caduque, sur une place ayant issue sur les rue des Deux-Boules et rue des Mauvaises-Paroles, for 10 Livre tournois per height (Following: April 30, 1648, amendment to this market) 23 April 1648
  7. ^ AN, MC/ET/XXIV/432, 11 November 1650
  8. ^ [1] Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine see p. 20
  9. ^ We know of a market concerning the forecourt and the paved courtyards, in 1650, by Louis Masson, master paveur in Paris, with whom Chamois used to work. In 1657, estimate of masonry by Chamois, for the walls of fence of the small park and the pavilions of corner. In 1673, development of the basins, flowerbeds, workbenches and the gardener's housing under the direction of Charles Chamois. In 1675, after Le Tellier had permission to expand the park on the Ursine and Vélizy sides, Chamois built water supplies and a reservoir between the Ursine and Viroflay ponds. see [2]
  10. ^ "Michel le Tellier III". Le Chateau de Chaville (in French).
  11. ^ Under the direction of Anne-Marie Cocula, Josette Pontet, Itinéraires spirituels, enjeux matériels en Europe: mélanges offerts à Philippe Loupès, volume 1, p. 186-187, Presses universitaires de Bordeaux, Bordeaux, 2005 ISBN 2-86781-369-7 Read online.
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