Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Logis Laspois in Saint-Martin-du-Fouilloux dans les Deux-Sèvres

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Logis
Deux-Sèvres

Logis Laspois in Saint-Martin-du-Fouilloux

    D59
    79420 Saint-Martin-du-Fouilloux
Private property

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1183
First written entry
1586
Death of René de Laspaye
1724
Major renovation
1795
Death of Pierre Rousseau
1987
Registration MH
2017
Repurchase by the Godard family
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Portal; facades and roofs of the housing body; stairs; room with 18th-century panelling on the ground floor: dining room (cad. A 218): by order of 16 December 1987

Key figures

Simon de Lespaus - Lord of the place First mention in 1183
René de Laspaye - Last direct heir Died in 1586 without descendants
Paul Rousseau - Owner and Renovator Work campaign in 1724
Pierre Henri Rousseau - Heir and notable Land clearing in the eighteenth century
Saint-Ange Courbe - Owner and processor Architectural changes in the 19th century
Famille Godard - Current owners Restoration since 2017

Origin and history

The Logis de Laspois, in Saint-Martin-du-Fouilloux (Deux-Sèvres), finds its origins in a feudal motte attested from the twelfth century. The first written records date back to 1183 with Simon de Lespaus, lord of the place. Over the centuries, the fief passed into the hands of noble families such as the Laspaye, the Boysson, or the Couhé, before being profoundly changed in the 18th century.

In the 17th century, the estate was marked by estate conflicts, especially after the death of René de Laspaye in 1586. The fief was then awarded to René Boysson, mayor of Poitiers, before being sent by marriage to Couhé and then to Rousseau. From 1724 onwards, they undertook a major renovation campaign, transforming the house into a home more in keeping with the classic tastes of the eighteenth century.

Rousseau, family of doctors and local notables, kept the estate until the 19th century. Pierre Henri Rousseau, heir to the 18th century, cleared the wooded lands to create crops. Its descendant, Saint-Ange Courbe, made architectural changes in the 19th century (upgrading of roofs, creation of a chapel). The house, partially in ruins in the 20th century, was bought in 2017 by the Godard family, which is beginning its restoration.

The building reveals medieval traces, such as a 13th-14th century chimney and filled moat, attesting to its defensive origin. The successive transformations (ceilings to the French, 18th century panelling) partially mask this old structure. Enlisted in the Historical Monuments in 1987, the house illustrates the architectural evolution of a fief poitevin over nearly nine centuries.

Today, the current owners aim to restore the house in its 17th and 18th century state, relying on archives and a rigorous analysis of the building. The site, long unknown, is gradually reintegrated as a key element of the local heritage of Saint-Martin-du-Fouilloux.

External links