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Bastide de Romegas, Puyricard dans les Bouches-du-Rhône

Bastide de Romegas, Puyricard

    3992 Chemin de Saint Donat
    13100 Aix-en-Provence
Private property
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Bastide de Romégas, à Puyricard
Crédit photo : Marlenedd - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1825
Solar dial
2e quart du XVIIIe siècle
Construction of the bastide
17 juillet 1996
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Bastide, including the commons, the dovecote, the threshing area, the chapel, the park with its box garden, the old vegetable garden and its wall, the tèse, the basins and the other elements constituting the park (cf. OT 39): entry by order of 17 July 1996

Key figures

François Mignet - Owner and historian Author of a *History of the French Revolution*, owner in the 19th century.

Origin and history

The bastide of Romegas is an emblematic building of the 2nd quarter of the 18th century, located in Puyricard, on the outskirts of Aix-en-Provence in the Bouches-du-Rhône. This estate, already mentioned in the archives in the middle of the eighteenth century, illustrates the architecture typical of the Provencal bastides of the period, combining main residences, outbuildings and organised landscape spaces. Its inscription as a historic monument in 1996 underlines its heritage importance, particularly for its architectural elements and its structured park (garden, vegetable garden, ponds).

In the 19th century, the bastide became the property of historian François Mignet, famous for his book History of the French Revolution. Some books in his personal library are still kept there today. A sundial dating from 1825, present on the site, bears witness to this period. The estate also includes ancillary buildings such as a chapel, a dovecote, and commons, reflecting the aristocratic or bourgeois way of life of the time in Provence.

The whole, including the bastide, its outbuildings and its park (with box garden, former vegetable garden, and ponds), was protected by decree in 1996 for its historical and landscape value. The archives and material elements still in place, such as the works of Mignet or the sundial, offer a concrete overview of its evolution throughout the centuries, from its creation in the eighteenth century to its residential and intellectual use in the nineteenth century.

External links