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Well said of Henry IV à Coutras en Gironde

Gironde

Well said of Henry IV

    2 Place du Château
    33230 Coutras
Puits dit de Henri IV
Puits dit de Henri IV
Puits dit de Henri IV
Puits dit de Henri IV
Puits dit de Henri IV
Puits dit de Henri IV
Puits dit de Henri IV
Puits dit de Henri IV
Puits dit de Henri IV
Crédit photo : Henry Salomé - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1528
Construction of the castle begins
1551
Construction of well
20 octobre 1587
Battle of Coutras
1731
Destruction of the castle
8 juillet 1911
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Puits dit de Henri IV. : classification by decree of 8 July 1911

Key figures

Henri IV - King of France Victory at Coutras in 1587.
Anne de Joyeuse - Duke and Catholic leader Defeated by Henry IV in 1587.

Origin and history

Henri IV's well is a former water well located in the heart of Coutras, Gironde, on Place Ernest-Barraud, near the town hall. Built in 1551 as a decorative element of Coutras Castle (now the only vestige), this hexagonal Renaissance-style well is two metres in diameter. It is decorated with six doric columns supporting a sculpted entanglement, surmounted by a scale dome and an ionic lantern. His nickname comes from his role as "witness" to the Battle of Coutras (20 Oct. 1587), where Henry IV defeated Duke Anne of Joyeuse.

Ranked a historic monument by decree of 8 July 1911, the well was originally dependent on a castle, the construction of which began in 1528 and continued in the 17th and 18th centuries. The sculptures of his frieze alternate between shields (now erased) and allegorical motifs, as an arm holding a sharp crown of knots, accompanied by an inscription on a banner. Owned by the commune, it symbolizes both Renaissance architecture and a key episode of the Wars of Religion in Aquitaine.

The historical sources, including the Mérimée bases and the communal archives, confirm its initial location in the enclosure of the castle, destroyed in 1731. The well, although modified over the centuries, retains original stylistic elements, such as its ion columnettes and its scale decoration. Its ranking among historical monuments underlines its heritage importance, both for its aesthetics and for its memorial value linked to Henry IV and local history.

External links