Hôtel de Charost

Hôtel de Charost is a hôtel particulier located at 39 rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré in Paris. Since 1814, it has been the official residence of the ambassador of the United Kingdom to France. It is located near the Élysée Palace.

Hôtel de Charost
The Official Residence of Her Britannic Majesty's Ambassador to France.
The Hôtel de Charost seen from the gardens.
Location within Paris
General information
Location Paris, France
Address39, rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré
75008 Paris, France
Coordinates48°52′8.97″N 2°19′7.90″E
Current tenants Her Majesty's Diplomatic Service
Construction started1720
Completed1722
Client Armand de Bethune, 2nd Duke of Charost and governor of Louis XV.
Technical details
Floor count4
Design and construction
Architectfr:Antoine Mazin

History

The hôtel was built in the 1720s for Armand de Bethune, 2nd Duke of Charost, a senior courtier of Louis XV. It was designed by Antoine Mazin, the king's own architect. The building was sited on the rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré, which was then a winding road that passed through fields and market gardens to the village of Roule on the outskirts of Paris.

After it had been an aristocratic home, the hôtel became the Embassy of Portugal, offices for the French home office (siège de bureaux), an Imperial Palace and the temporary residence of the Austrian ambassador.

In 1803, it was bought by Pauline Borghese, the sister of Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1814, she sold the building to the Duke of Wellington who paid her in instalments of Louis d'or. Borghese passed the gold onto Napoleon, who had been exiled to Elba following the Treaty of Fontainebleau. His dramatic return that climaxed the next year at Waterloo was partly financed with the sale of this house to the British.[1]

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