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Logis de la Vergne à Alloue en Charente

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Logis
Charente

Logis de la Vergne à Alloue

    Route de Verinne
    16490 Alloue
Logis de la Vergne à Alloue
Logis de la Vergne à Alloue
Logis de la Vergne à Alloue
Crédit photo : Rosier - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1670
Date engraved on the fireplace
1679
Heritage of Marc Guyot
1704
Installation of Marc Guyot
1812
Marriage of Françoise Guyot
1843
Date on covered passage
1961
Purchased by Maria Casarès
1996
Municipal legislation
2002
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The whole house (Case E 619): registration by order of 12 December 2002

Key figures

Marc Guyot du Repaire - Lord heir Receives the seigneury in 1679.
Marc Guyot - Lord and husband of Mary of Mairé Install the Vergne in chestnut (1704).
Françoise Guyot de Ferrodière - Inheritance by marriage Transfer the estate to the Grandmaison (1812).
François Charles de Grandmaison - Owner and married in 1843 Date engraved on the covered passage.
Maria Casarès - Comedian and owner Purchased the estate in 1961, legation in 1996.
André Schlesser - Comedian and husband of Casarès Co-owner of the estate (1961-1985).

Origin and history

The Logis de la Vergne, located in Alloue in Charente, is a mansion whose origins date back to the 15th and 17th centuries. The estate, initially surrounded by today's filled moat, was structured around two courses. The first housed the house body and a tower, while the second was lined with commons, of which only the entrance porch and part of the adjacent buildings remain. The site preserves defensive architectural elements, such as murderers, as well as a bell dated 1788, bearing witness to its seigneurial past.

The first attested lords of the estate are the Guyot. A fireplace in the kitchen dates from 1670, and Marc Guyot of the Repaire inherits the seigneury in 1679. In 1704 Marc Guyot and his wife Marie de Mairé settled there, raising the estate to the rank of chestnut. After several transmissions, including that to the Loyseau family of Grandmaison in 1812, the house was marked by the marriage of François Charles de Grandmaison in 1843, engraved on the covered passage. In the 20th century, the estate came into the hands of René Barbier (1933), then Maria Casarès and André Schlesser (1961), who made it a place of artistic life.

When Maria Casarès died in 1996, the estate was left to the municipality of Alloue. Since then, it has hosted a cultural project called Maison Maria Casarès, combining artist residence and summer theatre festival. The house and its library have been listed as historical monuments since 2002, thus preserving both architectural and memorial heritage, linked to local history and contemporary theatre.

The architecture of the house reflects its successive alterations: a rectangular body of building extended by a circular tower, long-paned roofs, and a covered 19th century passage. The commons, partially preserved, include stables and fenil modified over time. The estate, along the Charente river, is part of a wooded landscape, where remains of the north building body, near the banks.

External links