Charles Philippe Dieussart

1625–1696) was a Dutch architect and sculptor, active in Germany in the second half of the seventeenth century.

Most notably, he designed the Jagdschloss Glienicke, today a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Dieussart was descended from French Huguenots who had moved to the Dutch Republic and is thought to have been born in Rome.

Also, well-known is the tomb he designed for Günther von Passow in the Güstrow Cathedral.

He wrote the book Theatrum architecturae civilis [3][4] that was published in several editions (1679 and 1682 in Güstrow, 1692 and possibly also 1695 in Bayreuth),[3] dedicated to various of his patrons,[b][3] and for which the architect Leonhard Dientzenhofer commissioned a posthumous edition in Bamberg (with changed dedication and foreword)[5] in 1697.

Rossewitz Castle , designed by Charles Philippe Dieussart, Laage , Mecklenburg-Vorpommern