Hôtel des Ambassadeurs

Last updated
Hôtel des Ambassadeurs
Ancien Hotel des Ambassadeurs Vichy.jpg
The former hotel in 2012
Hotel des Ambassadeurs
General information
Location Vichy, France
Address1 Rue du Parc
Coordinates 46°07′22″N3°25′08″E / 46.1228°N 3.4189°E / 46.1228; 3.4189
Technical details
Floor count6

The Hotel des Ambassadeurs (French for "Ambassadors' Hotel") is a former hotel in Vichy, now transformed into a private residence. During World War II, the hotel housed the diplomatic missions that moved from German-occupied Paris to Vichy.

Contents

Location

The hotel is located near the Allier river, in the spa district of the city, at 1 rue du Parc [1] and place Joseph-Aletti opposite the opera, adjacent to the Aletti Palace and in the immediate vicinity of the Parc des Sources  [ fr ].

Description

Some rooms on the ground floor with their decor have been registered since March 4, 1991, as a Monument historique of France: the large entrance hall with its lights, staircase and glassware by Francis Chigot  [ fr ], the large living room, the small living room with its painted decoration, the old dining room and the patio. [1]

History

It was built in 1858 but in 1866 it was enlarged and restructured. A renowned hotel, it appeared in the first tourist guides of the time. In 1890, it was one of the first to be equipped with an elevator and a telephone. It then has a hall that can accommodate more than 500 people. In 1897, the rooms were equipped with heating (most hotels operating during the summer season were not equipped with it). In 1900, its owner, Mr. Roubeau, installed electric lighting there. It has adjoining villas around the hotel where whole families can be accommodated while benefiting from the hotel's services, such as the Castel flamand  [ fr ] at 1 and 2 rue de Belgique, and three villas on rue de Russie, connected to the hotel through underground passages. During World War I, the hotel was transformed into a military hospital. [2]

The hotel on August 26, 1944, during the arrival of the French Forces of the Interior. FFI Hotel des Ambassadeurs, Vichy.png
The hotel on August 26, 1944, during the arrival of the French Forces of the Interior.

The hotel played an important role during World War II. After Germany occupied France and established a government based in Vichy, the German government requested that the diplomatic missions based in Paris move to the new provisional capital. Several governments accepted the request and established their missions in the hotel, with over twenty embassies and over forty accredited foreign diplomats moving into the hotel's rooms. [3] [4] [5] Among those missions were:

In 1942, the Japanese ambassador to France, Sotomatsu Katō, fell from the window of the Japanese embassy. [24] His funeral was attended by the local diplomatic corps, as were other events, such as the marriage of Dominican envoy Porfirio Rubirosa and Danielle Darrieux or an Orthodox mass held for King Peter II of Yugoslavia. [25] The hotel closed definitively in 1989 and was transformed into a building with private apartments in 1998. [2]

See also

Notes

  1. Despite Japanese pressure, the French government did not recognise the Japanese-backed government of Wang Jingwei, instead continuing its relations with the Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-shek. [7]
  2. Denmark was a protectorate of Germany since 1940. Nevertheless, a legation operated in the hotel until the German occupation of the Zone libre in 1942. [6] [9] [10]
  3. The mission moved down the road from the hotel in 1941, near what was then the embassy of Mexico. [15]
  4. The legation moved next-door on February 2nd, 1943 to the Villa Ica after the U.S.' departure. [18] [19] [20]
  5. Also representing the Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom [22]
  6. The United States severed its relations with the Vichy government in 1942. [6]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vichy</span> Subprefecture and commune in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France

Vichy is a city in the Allier department, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, central France, in the historic province of Bourbonnais.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Moncef Bey</span> Bey of Tunis

Muhammad VII al-Munsif, ) commonly known as Moncef Bey was the Bey of Tunis between 19 June 1942 and 14 May 1943. He was the penultimate ruler of the Husainid dynasty.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Danielle Darrieux</span> French actress and singer (1917–2017)

Danielle Yvonne Marie Antoinette Darrieux was a French actress of stage, television and film, as well as a singer and dancer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marseille roundup</span> Systematic deportation of the Jews of Marseille in the Old Port

The Marseille roundup was the systematic deportation of the Jews of Marseille in the Old Port between 22 and 24 January 1943 under the Vichy regime during the German occupation of France. Assisted by the French police, directed by René Bousquet, the Germans organized a raid to arrest Jews. The police checked the identity documents of 40,000 people, and the operation sent 2,000 Jews first to Fréjus, then to the camp of Royallieu near Compiègne, in the Northern Zone of France, and then to Drancy internment camp, last stop before the extermination camps. The operation also encompassed the expulsion of an entire neighborhood before its destruction. Located in the Old Port, the 1st arrondissement was considered by the Germans to be a "terrorist nest" because of its small, windy and curvy streets For this occasion, SS leader Carl Oberg, in charge of the German Police in France, made the trip from Paris, and transmitted to Bousquet orders directly received from Himmler. It is a notable case of the French police's collaboration with the German occupiers.

Lycée Bonaparte is a French international school in Doha, Qatar. It includes levels maternelle (preschool) through lycée.

Henri Jules Louis Jeanson was a French writer and journalist. He was a "satrap" in the "College of 'Pataphysics".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Claude de Mesmes, comte d'Avaux</span> French diplomat (1595–1650)

Claude de Mesmes, comte d'Avaux (1595–1650) was a 17th-century French diplomat and public administrator. He was sent in various missions to Venice, Rome, Germany, Sweden, Denmark, and Poland by Richelieu.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vichy France</span> Client state of Nazi Germany (1940–1944)

Vichy France, officially the French State, was the French rump state headed by Marshal Philippe Pétain during World War II. It was named after its seat of government, the city of Vichy. Officially independent, but with half of its territory occupied under the harsh terms of the 1940 armistice with Nazi Germany, it adopted a policy of collaboration. Though Paris was nominally its capital, the government established itself in the resort town of Vichy in the unoccupied "free zone", where it remained responsible for the civil administration of France as well as its colonies. The occupation of France by Nazi Germany at first affected only the northern and western portions of the country, but in November 1942 the Germans and Italians occupied the remainder of Metropolitan France, ending any pretence of independence by the Vichy government.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">José Cabanis</span> French writer and lawyer

José Cabanis was a French novelist, essayist, historian and magistrate. He was elected mainteneur of the Académie des Jeux floraux in 1965 and a member of the Académie française in 1990.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Louis-Gui de Guérapin de Vauréal</span>

Louis-Guy de Guérapin de Vauréal, also Louis-Gui de Guérapin de Vauréal or Louis Guy Guerrapin de Vauréal, Baron de Vauréal et Comte de Belleval,, was a French aristocrat, ecclesiastic and diplomat.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henry Lémery</span>

Henry Lémery was a politician from Martinique who served in the French National Assembly from 1914–1919 and the French Senate from 1920–1941. Lémery was briefly Minister of Justice in 1934. During World War II (1939–45) he was Colonial Secretary in the Vichy government for three months in 1940 before being dismissed.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hôtel du Parc</span>

The Hôtel du Parc is a former hotel in the center of Vichy, a spa town in the center of France which hosted during the Second World War the government of the French state, commonly known as Vichy France. The hotel hosted a part of the government offices and the private apartment and offices of the Maréchal Pétain, during the Vichy regime and after 1942 also the offices of Pierre Laval. The building is now a private real estate.

<i>La Nueve</i> Military unit

The 9th Company of the Régiment de marche du Tchad, part of the French 2nd Armored Division was nicknamed La Nueve. The company consisted of 160 men under French command, 146 of whom were Spanish republicans including many anarchists, and French soldiers. All had fought during the liberation of French North Africa, and later participated in the Liberation of France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Government of Vichy France</span> Collaborationist government in Nazi-occupied France

The Government of Vichy France was the collaborationist ruling regime or government in Nazi-occupied France during the Second World War. Of contested legitimacy, it was headquartered in the town of Vichy in occupied France, but it initially took shape in Paris under Marshal Philippe Pétain as the successor to the French Third Republic in June 1940. The government remained in Vichy for four years, and fled into exile to Germany in September 1944 after the Allied invasion of France. It operated as a government-in-exile until April 1945, when the Sigmaringen enclave was taken by Free French forces. Pétain was brought back to France, by then under control of the Provisional French Republic, and put on trial for treason.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Law on the status of Jews</span> Antisemitic law in Vichy France

The Law of 3 October 1940 on the status of Jews was a law enacted by Vichy France. It provided a legal definition of the expression Jewish race, which was used during the Nazi occupation for the implementation of Vichy's ideological policy of "National Revolution" comprising corporatist and antisemitic racial policies. It also listed the occupations forbidden to Jews meeting the definition. The law was signed by Marshall Philippe Pétain and the main members of his government.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roundup (police action)</span> Mass arrest / detainment targeting a group

A roundup is a police / military operation of interpellation and arrest of people taken at random from a public place, or targeting a particular population by ethnicity, appearance, or other perceived membership in a targeted group. To ensure operational success, organizers rely on the element of surprise in order to reduce the risk of evasion as much as possible. When the operation involves large numbers of individuals not targeted for any perceived group membership, it may be called a mass arrest.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Embassy of Peru, Paris</span>

The Embassy of Peru in France is the foremost diplomatic mission of Peru in France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hôtel de Besenval</span> Hôtel particulier in Paris, France

The Hôtel de Besenval is a historic hôtel particulier in Paris with a cour d'honneur and a large English landscape garden, an architectural style commonly known as entre cour et jardin – meaning a residence between the courtyard in front of the building and the garden behind it. The building is listed as a historical monument by decree of 20 October 1928. It houses the Embassy of the Swiss Confederation and the residence of the Swiss ambassador to France since 1938. The residence is named after its most famous former owner, Pierre Victor, Baron de Besenval de Brunstatt.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Consulate General of Peru, Paris</span> Peruvian consulate, Paris

The Consulate General of Peru in Paris is one of two diplomatic representations of Peru in Paris, the other being the Peruvian embassy.

References

  1. 1 2 "Ancien hôtel des Ambassadeurs (Notice № PA00093401)". POP : la plateforme ouverte du patrimoine . Ministère de la Culture.
  2. 1 2 Renault-Jouseau, Delphine (2010). Vichy : invitation à la promenade (in French). Lyon: Lieux Dits. pp. 95, 160. ISBN   978-2-914528-96-2.
  3. Tola, Raúl (2017). La noche sin ventanas (in Spanish). Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial Perú. pp. 377–378. ISBN   9786124349133.
  4. Grancher, Marcel E. (1955). Le temps des " Colonels " (in French). FeniXX. p. 186. ISBN   9791041008865. Quelques «sorties» à l'Hôtel des Ambassadeurs qui a le rare privilège d'abriter 26 ambassades ou légations.
  5. Callil, Carmen (2006). Bad Faith: A History of Family and Fatherland. Random House. p. 255. ISBN   9781473511859.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Decaux, Alain. "Ambassades et Légations près de l'Etat Français à Vichy". Les 1502 jours du chef de l'Etat français.
  7. Young, Ernest (2013), Ecclesiastical Colony: China's Catholic Church and the French Religious Protectorate, Oxford University Press, pp. 250–251, ISBN   978-0199924622
  8. 1 2 3 4 Dormandy, John (2018). A History of Savoy: Gatekeeper of the Alps. Fonthill Media. p. 584. Forty countries sent ambassadors to Vichy France including, initially, the United States, Soviet Union, China, Japan, and the Vatican. They were all put up in the Hotel des Ambassadeurs.
  9. Kraks blaa bog (in Danish). Vol. 32. Ove Holger Krak. 1941. p. 1205. Adresse: Légation de Danemark, 77 Avenue Marceau, Paris XVI, (foreløbig Hotel des Ambassadeurs, Vichy)
  10. Rathsman, Siri (1945). Vichy hat das Spiel verloren: Schilderungen aus dem geschlagenen Frankreich (in German). Europa Verlag Zürich/New York. p. 170. Aber sobald die Deutschen in die freie Zone einrückten, installierte sich eine Reihe deutscher Offiziere mit ihrem Gefolge im Hotel des Ambassadeurs; und zwar nicht nur in den Zimmern, die vorübergehend bewohnt wurden, sondern auch in denen der Diplomaten. So mußten z . B. Mitglieder der dänischen Legation ausziehen.
  11. Collado, Lipe (2001). La Impresionante Vida de Un Seductor, Porfirio Rubirosa (in Spanish). Editora Collado. p. 92. ISBN   9789993429203. Aproximadamente en octubre de 1940 la legación dominicana -neutral en el conflicto- se instaló en el Hotel des Ambassadeurs, cerca del Hotel Du Parc.
  12. KÜM Közlemények (Bulletin du ministère des Affaires étrangères) de l’année 1947. Cf. également Annuaire diplomatique et consulaire de la République française de 1954.
  13. Novak, Fabián (2005). Las relaciones entre el Perú y Francia (1827–2004) (in Spanish). PUCP. p. 209. ISBN   9972-42-721-8.
  14. Seruya, Teresa (2018). Misérias e Esplendores da Tradução no Portugal do Estado Novo (PDF) (in Portuguese). Universidade Católica Editora. p. 128. ISBN   9789725406236. Assim, Paulo Osório, agora Adido de Imprensa daLegação de Portugal na França ocupada [Encontra-se em Vichy, no Hotel des Ambassadeurs], pede instruções a Ferro sobre sedeve fazer propaganda do segundo volume dos Discursos (30/8/1940).
  15. Séguéla, Matthieu (1992). Pétain-Franco: les secrets d'une alliance (in French). A. Michel. p. 50. ISBN   9782226058959. Logés à l'hôtel des ambassadeurs, les diplomates espagnols ne trouve- ront qu'en octobre 1941 un bâtiment pour accueillir la légation d'Espagne, grâce à l'intervention du Maréchal, peiné devant le nomadisme de Lequerica. L'ambassade espagnole se situait au 46 de l'avenue Lyautey, près de l'Hôtel du parc et de l'ambassade du Mexique.
  16. Loiseau, Ivan (1974). Souvenirs et témoignages (in French). Éditions des "Cahiers bourbonnais". p. 233. Voici le récit du témoin le plus intéressé, le Docteur Roubaud, propriétaire de l'hôtel des Ambassadeurs: «Hier soir, vers 9 heures 30, trois individus accompagnés d'une femme, les uns et les autres parlant fort mal le français, se présentèment à l'hôtel, demandèrent à parler au portier qui les renvoya à un secrétaire de l'Ambassade d'Espagne . Il s'agissait tout simplement du désir exprimé par certains Espagnols faisant partie de l'Armée secrète , de voir disparaître des fenêtres de l'hôtel des Ambassadeurs les drapeaux espagnols, sous prétexte que ces drapeaux étaient ceux de «Gouvernement de Franco» et non ceux de la République Espagnole de 1936.
  17. Serrano, Secundino (2005). La última gesta: los republicanos que vencieron a Hitler (1939–1945) (in Spanish). Punto de Lectura. p. 511. ISBN   9788403096066. En efecto, entre los refugiados, siempre ha sido dominante la idea de que el regresar a España significaba la prisión y hasta el fusilamiento. V.E. recordará el despacho núm. 757 en el que relataba el incidente de la bandera en el Hôtel des Ambassadeurs, de Vichy, y la conversación del señor Raero con quienes quisieron quitarla. En el curso de la entrevista, uno de los españoles presentes manifestó creer a pies juntillas que los pasaportes que se otorgaban a los refugiados llevaban una señal especial que los condenaba a la cárcel o al patíbulo.
  18. Jerusalmi, René (1995). Les relations économiques franco-suisses (1939–1945): un aspect insoupçonné de la Seconde Guerre mondiale (in French). P. Lang. p. 221. ISBN   9783906754147. Légation de Vichy / Hotel des Ambassadeurs (1940-1942), puis Villa Ica (1943-44)
  19. "Image: "The Villa Ica, Seat Of The Swiss Legation In Vichy In 1943"". Getty Images . 1943-01-02.
  20. Mallet, Audrey. "The Villa Ica". Vichy 1939–1945.
  21. de Broglie, Gabriel (2005). L'histoire et le roman aujourd'hui: actes du colloque tenu le 20 avril 2005 à la Fondation Singer-Polignac (in French). Paris: Fondation Singer-Polignac. pp. fr. L'ambassadeur de Turquie avait abrité à l'hôtel des Ambassadeurs le jeune Oury qui, du coup, se souvenait d'y avoir vu Porfirio Rubirosa de la légation de Saint-Domingue, ou tel autre ambassadeur.
  22. Verhoeyen, Etienne (2011). Spionnen aan de achterdeur de Duitse Abwehr in België, 1936–1945 (in Dutch). Maklu. p. 460. ISBN   9789046604274.
  23. "An American Diplomat in Vichy France". Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training. 2013-07-18.
  24. "JAPANESE AMBASSADOR. Fatal Fall From Window". The West Australian . 1942-02-14.
  25. Mataix, David (2006). L'Europe des révolutions nationales, 1940-1942 (in French). L'Harmattan. p. 363. ISBN   9782296019881. All the testimonies show the boredom that affected all the characters in the capital. Journalists, foreigners, certain politicians often met in the evening in the salon of the Hotel des Ambassadeurs, but it must be clear that nothing was happening there. Austerity in Vichy was in order, out of solidarity with the prisoners and those who suffered throughout the country, but also as a consequence of the restrictions and supplies that appeared in the winter of 1941, an exceptionally cold winter. From 1941, Pétain even had to organize two ceremonies to present his vows. In addition, the clergy had regained power in this capital and participated in the control of good morals. Christmas 1940, which the journalists celebrated loudly and with a lot of alcohol, caused a scandal. All the people occupied themselves as they could by participating in charities, galas, the funeral of the Japanese ambassador, the Orthodox mass on February 6, 1942 in honor of the seventeenth birthday of King Peter II of Yugoslavia or at the wedding of Danièle Darrieux with an attaché at the Embassy of the Dominican Republic.