Palace of Poitiers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Palace of justice in Poitiers.
Palace of justice in Poitiers.

The Palace of Justice in Poitiers (French: Palais de justice de Poitiers) began its life as the seat of the Counts of Poitou and Dukes of Aquitaine in the tenth through twelfth centuries.

Contents

[edit] Origin

The former Merovingian kingdom of Aquitaine was re-established by Charlemagne for his son Louis the Pious; in the ninth century, a palace was constructed or reconstructed[1] for him, one among many, above a Roman wall datable to the late third century, at the highest spot of the town. Louis stayed there many times as a king and then returned to the palace after becoming emperor, in 839 and 840. The palatium was specifically called a palace in thje reign of Charles the Bald.[2]After the disintegration of the Carolingian realm, the palace became the seat of the Counts of Poitiers. The first palace of Poitiers was completely destroyed by a fire in 1018.

The palace was completely rebuilt, straddling the wall, by the Count-Dukes of Aquitaine, then at the pinnacle of their power. In 1104, Count William IX added a dungeon on the town side. It is known as the tour Maubergeon, after his mistress Amauberge ("the Dangerous"), wife of Vicomte Aimery de Chatellerault and grandmother of Eleanor of Aquitaine.[3] The rectangular keep is reinforced with four smaller square towers projecting from each corner; it was greatly damaged when the southern portion of the palace was set ablaze by Henry of Grosmont in 1346.

Between 1191 and 1204, Alienor fitted up a dining hall, the Salle des Pas Perdus, the "hall of lost footsteps", where a footfall was silenced by the vastness of its space— 50 metres in length, 17 metres in width, perhaps the largest in contemporary Europe. The hall has not retained its original beamed ceiling; it has been covered by chestnut woodwork, constructed in 1862 by a team of marine carpenters from La Rochelle. The walls of the hall are daubed and painted so as to imitate stone facing. Their monotony is relieved by cusped arches resting on slender columns. A stone bench rings the walls of the hall.

[edit] Reconstruction

Duke John I of Berry, who was also appanage count of Poitiers, rebuilt the part of the palace which had been destroyed by fire in 1346. On the one hand, the dungeon and the ramparts were reconstructed; on the other hand, the private apartments were restored in the Gothic Flamboyant style by Jean's court architect and sculptor Guy de Dammartin. These works were undertaken between 1388 and 1416, during the pauses in the course of the Hundred Years' War.[4]

The tour Maubergeon was reconstructed on three floors with ogival vaulting, illuminated by glazed windows and topped by nineteen statues. Of these, only sixteen pieces survive: they represent the duke's counsellors in clerical habits, while the statues of the duke and his wife are missing. In its unfinished state, the tower has neither machicolations nor the canopies above the statues.

At the behest of Guy de Dammartin, three monumental stoves were installed in the grand hall; they were decorated with Gothic Flamboyant statuary and surmounted by a gallery. The southern wall of the hall was also overhauled: it was pierced by great bays which masked the pipes from outside view. The exterior of this wall was decorated with flamboyant ogives. The floor was tiled by Jehan de Valence, called the "Saracen" in the accounts, with green and gold circular lustred maiolica tiles. When the project was complete, Jehan de Valemnce returned home and no furter lustred tin-glazed faience was produced oin France[5]

[edit] Later developments

Poitiers Palais Justice Salle pas perdus

The count-dukes sometimes administered justice in the grand hall. It was there that Hugues de Lusignan, comte de la Marche, publicly challenged Louis IX on Christmas day, 1241. After the province of Poitou was reattached to the royal domain, la salle des pas perdus was renamed la salle du Roi ("the royal hall"). A judicial insitution, le parlement royal, sat there from 1418 to 1436.

The palace was used for administering justice: on 5 June 1453 Jacques Coeur was tried there, and justice was dispensed in the Palais de Justice through the French Revolution. In 1821, a monumental staircase with a Doric portico was attached to the medieval building. Too soon to benefit from interest generated by the Gothic Revival, the duc de Berry's private apartments were gradually demolished to give room to the appellate court and its chancery.

A scene from Luc Besson's The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc was filmed in the grand hall of the palace.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Poitiers had been a Visigothic seat of power; for general context see Carlrichard Brühl, Palatium und Civitas: Studien zur Profantopographie spätantiker Civitates vom 3. bis zum 13. Jahrhundert, i: Gallien (Cologne/Vienna) 1975.
  2. ^ "Cour d'Appel de Poitiers".
  3. ^ The official website offers an etymology from mallobergum, the place of tribunal (Merovingian mallum) on the hill (berg), the vicomtesse deriving her name "La Maubergionne" from this place of residence where she was installed.
  4. ^ Duke Jean's accounts for the reconstruction at Poitiers, 1384-86, are preserved in the Archives Nationales, Paris (M. L. Solon, "The Lustred Tile Pavement of the Palais de Justice of Poitiers" The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 12 No. 56 (November 1907), pp. 83-86) p 56.
  5. ^ Solon 1907.

[edit] References

This article is based on a translation of the equivalent article of the French Wikipedia on 4 November 2006.

In other languages