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Manoir du Rouergoux à Saint-Médard dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Lot

Manoir du Rouergoux

    Le Rouergoux
    46150 Saint-Médard

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVe siècle (2e moitié)
Initial construction
XVIIe siècle
Home expansion
XVIIIe siècle (3e quart)
Transformation of the pigeon tree
15 décembre 1987
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Manoir du Rouergoux and its dependencies (Case A 215): inscription by order of 15 December 1987

Key figures

Hugues Couderc - Masatge labourer Owner in the 17th century, ancestor of the lineage.
Géraud Couderc - Owner (died 1686) Father of three daughters married to practitioners.
Fils de Géraud Couderc - Practitioner and merchant Heir of the mansion in the 18th century.

Origin and history

The Rouergoux mansion, located in Saint-Médard in the Lot (Occitanie), is an architectural testimony of the 17th and 18th centuries. It embodies the arrival of wheeled families after the Hundred Years War to repopulate the Quercy, with a tower and a house built in the 15th century. This site, owned by the Couderc family in the 17th and 18th centuries, reflects the evolution of a complete farm: the medieval tower was converted into a dovecote, while the house was enlarged by a perpendicular wing. The outbuildings (stables, barns, cuviers) were added between the 17th and 19th centuries, illustrating the adaptation of structures to local agricultural needs.

The particularity of the mansion lies in its structure barn laid on the ground, an architectural rarity in Querynoise. The site also preserves a bread oven and a stone cellar accessible by an empty hole, typical of the massages of the region. Hugues Couderc, qualified as a masatge labourer in the archives, and his son Géraud (died 1686) embody this line of owners: their alliances with practitioners (legals) and merchants underline the social ascent linked to the exploitation of the estate. Ranked a historic monument in 1987, the mansion combines medieval heritage and adaptations of modern times.

Together, including the traditional Quercynian house, the square dovecote with bolts, and agricultural buildings, offers an intact example of the rural life of the Ancien Régime. The archives mention a variety of activities (breeding, viticulture, crop storage), while the curved archetra frame of the barn reveals local craftsmanship. The Rouergoux Manor House, due to its state of conservation and its functional diversity, is a major milestone in the agricultural heritage of Lotois.

External links