The hôtel
de la Marine (also known as the hôtel du Garde-Meuble) is an historic building
located on place de la Concorde in Paris, to the east of rue Royale. It was
designed and built between 1757 and 1774 by the architect Ange-Jacques Gabriel,
on the newly created square first called Place Louis XV. The identical building
to its west, constructed at the same time, now houses the hôtel de Crillon and
the Automobile Club of France.
The Hôtel
de la Marine was originally the home of the royal Garde-Mobile, the office
managing the furnishing of all royal properties. Following the French
Revolution it became the Ministry of the French Navy, which occupied it until
2015. It was entirely renovated between 2015 and 2021. It now displays the
restored 18th century apartments of Marc-Antoine Thierry de Ville-d'Avray, the
King's Intendant of the Garde-Meuble, as well the salons and chambers later
used by the French Navy.
The
decision to create the current Place de la Concorde was originally taken in
1748, as the site for an equestrian statue of Louis XV. The statue celebrated
the recovery of the King from a serious illness. The site was on swampy land
beside the river at the very edge of Paris, between the gates of the garden of
the Tuileries Palace and the Champs Elysees. This construction took place well
before the construction of the Rue de Rivoli, the rue Royale, or the bridge
over the Seine at that location.
The King
owned most of the land, and donated it to the city for the new square. A
competition was held for the design, which attracted nineteen different plans,
but none of them were acceptable to the King. Instead, he assigned his royal
architect, Ange-Jacques Gabriel, who had inherited the title of First Architect
of the King from his father, Jacques V Gabriel, to make a fusion of the best
ideas. Gabriel borrowed features of the proposals of Germain Boffrand, Pierre
Contant d'Ivry and others. The most distinctive feature, the facade of columns
facing the square, was largely inspired by the Louvre Colonnade designed by
Claude Perrault in 1667–1674. The new plan was approved by the King in December
1755, and construction began in 1758. At that time, the plans for the use of
the specific buildings had not been finalised. In 1768 the King decided that
the northwest building should be become the home of the Garde-Meuble of the
Crown, the overseer of royal furnishings.
The new
building was one of two structures with identical neoclassical facades on the
north side of the square. To the west of the Rue Royale are four separate
buildings behind a single facade, which originally were residences of the
nobility. Number ten is now houses the Hotel Crillon, The Automobile Club of
France occupies number six and number eight. The other building, to the east of
Rue Royale,was designated the royal Garde-Meuble, or depot for the royal
furniture, art, and other possessions of the crown.
The Hôtel du Garde-Meuble
The Garde-Meuble
of the Crown had been created by Henry IV of France in the 17th century, and
its head was given more specific duties by Louis XIV under his chief minister
Jean-Baptiste Colbert. The Intendant of the Garde-Mueuble was a high official
who reported directly to the King. Under Colbert, he was assigned to oversee
and maintain all the furniture and decorative items of royal residences,
including tapestries, and to protect and maintain particularly fine pieces of
furniture, labeled as "Furniture of the Crown". These pieces were
considered National, not personal property; in 1772, the Garde-Meuble became
the first museum of decorative arts in Paris. Its galleries were open to the
public on the first Tuesday of each month between Easter and All Saints' Day.
The
Garde-Meuble contained a chapel, a library, workshops, stables and apartments,
including those of the intendant of the Garde-Meuble – at first
Pierre-Élisabeth de Fontanieu (1767–1784), then Marc-Antoine Thierry de
Ville-d'Avray (1784–1792) whose apartment has been restored and is on display.
Marie-Antoinette also had an apartment there which she used when visiting Paris
from the Palace of Versailles.
The Revolution – the Ministry of the Navy
In 1789 Hotel had a large collection of weapons, mostly ceremonial, including swords, medieval lances, and two ornate cannon, which Louis XIV had received as gifts from the King of Siam. On 13 July 1789, a large crowd angry at the King's decision to dismiss his finance minister Jacques Necker marched to the building, encouraged by the radical orator Camille Desmoulins. The intendant of the Garde-Meuble, Thierry de Ville-d'Array, happened to be absent that day. The acting intendant was frightened by the angry mob. He invited the crowd inside the building to take away the weapons and two cannon, but urged them spare the more valuable art, tapestries and furniture. The next morning, 14 July 1789, the two cannon from the Hotel de la Marine fired the first shots at the Bastille, launching the French Revolution.
Soon afterwards,
in October 1789, as the Revolution grew, the King was forced to move with his
family from Versailles to Paris, to the Tuileries Palace. Some of his valuable
possessions were moved to the Conciergerie. It soon took on other duties. The
Secretary of State of the Navy, César Henri de la Luzerne, moved his offices to
the Garde-Meuble. and from 1789 onwards it housed the naval ministry.[1]
UnderAdmiral Decrès, the Navy gradually expanded its offices, and by 1798 the
navy occupied the whole building.
In 1792, a
remarkable crime took place in the building. A set of The diamonds used in the
coronation crowns of Louis XV and XVI, including the famous Regent Diamond, had
been moved for safe storage to the building. On the night of 16–17 September
1792, the diamonds disappeared. The thieves, Cambon and Douligny, were later
caught and guillotined in front of the building (The first executions by the
guillotine on the Place de la Concorde), and the diamonds recovered.
In 1793,
during the Reign of Terror, the portion of the modern Place de la Concorde in
front of the neighbouring building, the Palais de Gabriel (now the Hotel
Crillon, was the site the guillotine, and the place of execution of Louis XVI
and Marie Antoinette, and then in 1794, of the revolution leaders Danton and
Robespierre.
Throughout
the 19th century the building was modified for the various needs of the Navy.
New wings were constructed behind the original building, and a neighbouring
building at 5 rue Sain-Florentin was purchased in 1855 and added to the Hôtel.
The interiors were also transformed; the salons facing the Place de la Concorde
remained in place, but the large hall for the display of large royal furniture
pieces was replaced in 1843 by two new salons honouring great moments in French
naval history. Much or the original decoration of the rooms was removed, or
covered by new works.
The interior decor by Jacques Gondouin, inspired by Piranesi, was an important step forward in 18th-century taste, but it was profoundly distorted by changes under the Second French Empire, although the grands salons d'apparat and the Galerie Dorée still maintain some of the original elements. The building was the scene of several historic events, from a ball honouring the coronation of Napoleon I in 1804, the celebration of the dedication of the Obelisque on the Place de la Concorde by King Louis Philippe in 1836, and the drafting of the decree of the French President abolishing slavery in April 1848.
After the
fall of France in June 1940, the Kriegsmarine, the naval forces of Nazi Germany
set up their headquarters here. They remained in place up until the
Kriegsmarine had to evacuate its presence due to the approach of American and
Free French forces in August 1944.[11] In 1989 President François Mitterrand
invited foreign leaders to the loggia of the hotel to view the parade
celebrating the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution.
National
monument
In 2015,
the French government decided to consolidate all of the French military
headquarters at a single site, the Hexagon at Ballard in the 15th
arrondissement. The navy definitively left the building in 2015. Before its
departure, the government considered leasing 12,700 square meters of the
building to other tenants, but, after a study of the problem by a commission
led by former President Giscard d'Estaing, it was decided to keep the entire
building as a public monument under the direction of the Center of National
Monuments.
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