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Tour du Breuil à Dignac en Charente

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Tour du Breuil
Tour du Breuil
Tour du Breuil
Tour du Breuil
Tour du Breuil
Crédit photo : Arnoul de VANSSAY - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1360-1372
English construction hypothesis
4e quart XIVe - 1er quart XVe siècle
Construction of dungeon
XVIIe siècle
Redesign of the round path
1774
Sale to Jean Le Roy de Lachèches
23 décembre 1964
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Donjon; the interior of the chapel decorated with murals and the corresponding cover (Box B 31): inscription by decree of 23 December 1964

Key figures

Roger de Raymond - Lord of Breuil (17th century) Author of a murder related to a family debt.
Jean Le Roy de Lenchères - Marshal of the Camps and King's Army Owner in 1774, governor of Corsica.
Bertrand Du Guesclin - Connétable de France (XIVth century) Returned the region to the English about 1372.
Odette des Roches de Chassay - Heir (XIX-20th century) Send the Breuil to the Laferrière by covenant.
Édouard III - King of England (XIVth century) Beneficiary of the Treaty of Bretigny (1360).

Origin and history

The Tour du Breuil, located in Dignac, Charente, is a 20-metre-high rectangular dungeon built between the late 14th and early 15th centuries. It dominates the sources of the Scale, tributing from the Touvre, and was surrounded by moats with a drawbridge. Its military architecture (walls of 1.80 m thick, mâchicoulis, niches) suggests a defensive function, although reshuffles in the 17th century have altered some elements such as the round path.

The tower could have been built by the English between 1360 (Treaty of Bretigny) and 1372 (recapture of the strongholds by Du Guesclin), but its architectural style also suggests a later construction. It replaced an earlier strong house controlling access to Angoulême, owned by the Raymond family. In the 17th century, Roger de Raymond, lord of Breuil, committed a murder linked to a debt of 26,000 pounds.

In the 18th century, the estate passed into the hands of several noble families: the Arnauld of Boueix, then the Arnauld of Ronsenac, before being sold in 1774 to Jean Le Roy de Lachèches, Marshal of the Camps and Armies of the King. The latter, governor of Corsica, reportedly imprisoned Napoleon Bonaparte's father. The property has remained for more than two centuries in the same family line (by alliance), via the Laferrière and the Villemandy de La Mesnière.

The captivated chapel, disused before 1789, preserves frescoes of the 15th century (or 14th) representing a doubly knight, Saint Michael, Saint Christophe, and a king with the flower of lily. These paintings, although degraded, bear witness to the religious and symbolic importance of the site. The primitive house, protected by the tower and turrets (including one destroyed in the 19th century), was partially redesigned, with additions like a modern building in 1920.

Listed as an Additional Inventory of Historic Monuments since 1964, the Breuil Tower illustrates the architectural and social evolution of a seigneurial site, combining military, residential and religious functions. The stone walls, intact mâchicoulis and traces of frescoes make this a rare testimony of this Charentaise period.

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