Your alt text
Your alt text
Your alt text

01 / 03

Hôtel Nugues

Language(s) spoken: French

The name Rue de l'Armillerie comes from the Latin "Armilla". This name recalls the presence of jewelers and craftsmen.

At no. 18: Hôtel Nugues, a beautifully restored Renaissance residence dating from the 16th and 17th centuries.

Many street names are linked to trades or guilds:

Rue Perrolerie was the street of the "Boilermakers",

Rue Sarraillerie was the street of "locksmiths",

Place Macel, from the Latin "macello" (butcher), was the street of the "Butchers".

Note the Hôtel Nugues :

- its semicircular portal and wooden door decorated with diamond-shaped

motifs.

- its inner courtyard, with a well (many underground streams feed the wells in the historic center)

- its elegant Baluster Galleries on Arches.

The Hôtel was owned by families who gave France a Minister of War in 1792, Joseph Servan, and a First Empire General, Saint Cyr Nugues.

Accessible on guided tours.

Address

Rue de l'Armillerie

26100 Romans-sur-Isère

Services

Facilities

Parking nearby

1/3

img alt
img alt
img alt
Z

Things to discover nearby

Explore the slopes

Explore

Snow reports

Explore

Weather

Resort

°

Morning

°

Afternoon

Summit

°

Morning

°

Afternoon

Explore

Our partners

Labels