In the heart of Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, this 15th-century town house houses an exceptional lapidary museum, with its octagonal staircase tower and Gallo-Roman baths buried beneath the courtyard.
The former Hôtel de Sade is one of those discreet buildings that conceal centuries of overlapping history behind its austere Provencal stone façade. Tucked away in the narrow streets of Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, this beautiful late-Gothic 15th-century town house is now one of the most remarkable lapidary museums in the PACA region, offering visitors a simultaneous plunge into medieval architecture and the depths of Roman antiquity. What makes this place truly unique is the dizzying stratification of time that can be seen at every step. The inner courtyard, reached via an elegant vaulted passageway, is a concentration of different eras: the octagonal staircase tower, a Gothic jewel of delicate proportions, stands alongside the subterranean memory of a Roman hypocaust unearthed in 1948, revealing that the site was once home to ancient thermal baths with carefully masoned brick pillars. The lapidary museum occupying the rooms of the hotel houses a collection of sculptures, inscriptions and architectural fragments, mainly from the site of Glanum, the ancient Greco-Roman city excavated on the outskirts of Saint-Rémy. These exceptional pieces, which interact with the medieval walls that house them, make the visit a rich archaeological and artistic experience, popular with lovers of Antiquity and Provencal vernacular architecture alike. The atmosphere of the Hôtel de Sade is that of a place inhabited by time, rather than overly musealised. The cobbled courtyard, bathed in southern light, is an invitation to stroll and contemplate, while the octagonal tower, with its spiral staircase, evokes the daily life of the bourgeois families who made Saint-Rémy prosper in the late Middle Ages. A monument not to be missed during a stay in the Alpilles.
The Hôtel de Sade is in the tradition of late 15th-century Provençal Gothic civil architecture, characterised by a sober façade contrasting with the richness of the interior spaces. The local stone, blond limestone from the Alpilles region, gives the building a warm hue typical of southern construction, with a patina of subtle golds and ochres over the centuries. The most remarkable architectural feature of the building is undoubtedly the octagonal stair tower that rises from the inner courtyard. This type of tower-cage, common in the flamboyant Gothic architecture of the south of France, served the different levels of the residence and was an element of ostentatious prestige. Its octagonal shape, more elaborate than the simple cylinder, testifies to the care taken by the patron to decorate his residence. The vaulted passageway leading from the street to the inner courtyard is another characteristic feature of the southern medieval town house, creating a transition between public space and domestic privacy. Beneath the paved courtyard, the Gallo-Roman hypocaust discovered in 1948 adds a unique archaeological dimension to the building. This underfloor heating system, consisting of brick pillars (pilae) supporting a raised floor under which hot air circulated, combined with a network of hydraulic pipes, bears witness to a sophisticated thermal organisation typical of Roman bathing establishments of the 1st or 2nd century AD.
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Saint-Rémy-de-Provence
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur