In French contexts, an
hôtel particulier is a
townhouse of a grand sort. (In mediaeval English,
hôtel was rendered as "
inn",
the townhouse of a nobleman, now surviving only as used in
Inns of Court.
Particulier meant "personal" or "private"). Whereas an ordinary
maison (house) was built as part of a row, sharing
party walls with the houses on either side and directly fronting on a street, an
hôtel particulier was often free-standing, and by the 18th century it would always be located
entre cour et jardin, between the entrance court, the
cour d'honneur, and the garden behind. There are
hôtels particuliers in many large cities, such as
Paris,
Bordeaux,
Albi,
Aix en Provence,
Avignon,
Caen,
Lyon,
Montpellier,
Nancy,
Rouen,
Rennes,
Toulouse and
Troyes. The term is comparable to the
townhouse which housed the British nobleman in
London.