Marin de la Vallée


Marin de la Vallée,, juré du Roy en l'office de massonnerye, architecte des bastiments de la Royne mère, was a 16th/17th-century French architect.
His father Jean II de la Vallée and his grandfather Jean I, also a Parisian, were already master masons in Paris.
In 1591, Marin de la Vallée married in Paris Jeanne Morissaut, who died in 1646, daughter of Pierre Morissaut and Olive Sollé.

Legacy

Marin de la Vallée is better known in retrospect thanks to the international reputation of his descendants who settled in Sweden as architects to the king.
Eight adult children, four sons and four daughters are mentioned:
Marin de la Vallée was first cited in various works undertaken by the city of Paris as an expert:
In 1624 the construction contract for the Palais du Luxembourg was withdrawn from Salomon de Brosse. On 26 March 1624, the Queen Mother's Council retroceded the contract to Marin de la Vallée for the completion of the palace. He intervened as master mason to realize the north-east wing according to the plans of Salomon de Brosse. These works were probably finished in spring 1626. On 1 April 1626, he signed a contract for the construction of the Petit Luxembourg and a wall separating the garden from the park. In June 1626, he signed a second contract for the completion of the courtyard of the palace with the paving of the terrace and its balustrade.
Among his personal constructions are: