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House with beams of Peyregras in Mazières-Naresse dans le Lot-et-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Maison classée MH
Maison à empilage de poutres
Maisons à pans de bois
Lot-et-Garonne

House with beams of Peyregras in Mazières-Naresse

    D250
    47210 Mazières-Naresse
Maison à empilage de poutres de Peyregras à Mazières-Naresse
Maison à empilage de poutres de Peyregras à Mazières-Naresse
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1453
Battle of Castillon
1472-1485 et 1515-1530
Immigration waves
Fin XVe - Début XVIe siècle
Construction of stacked houses
1971
Start of studies
1991-1992
First protections
25 janvier 1996
Home ranking Peyregras
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

House and its appentis, also stacked with beams (Box B2 251): classification by order of 25 January 1996

Key figures

François Fray - Researcher and Discoverer Started the study of stacking houses in 1971.
Jules Momméja - Local historian Compared these houses to Scandinavian constructions in 1903.
Henri Raulin - Author of the Corpus of Rural Architecture Studyed similar techniques in Savoie.

Origin and history

The house with beams of Peyregras in Mazières-Naresse is an emblematic specimen of the squared log constructions, typical of the north of the Agenas at the edge of the Périgord. These houses, built between the end of the 15th and the beginning of the 16th century, reflect a wooden construction technique stacked, comparable to Nordic chalets. Their concentration around the cantons of Villeréal and Castillonnès, as well as their spread to Issigeac and Villeneuve-sur-Lot, is explained by the repopulation of the region after the Hundred Years War, thanks in particular to migratory waves coming from the Central Massif and Poitou.

The study of these houses began in 1971 under the leadership of François Fray, then by the Association des Amis du Pastourais, which recorded 53 copies. Their ethnological and archaeological interest was recognized by the regional heritage commissions, leading to the classification or registration of seven of them between 1991 and 1992. The house of Peyregras, classified in 1996, illustrates this unique heritage, with an architecture divided into two spaces: one dedicated to harvests, the other to housing, separated by a half-timbered partition.

The historical context of these buildings is marked by the need to repopulate the Agenas and the Périgord, devastated after the Battle of Castillon (1453) and the Hundred Years War. Local lords and abbots offered land to newcomers, provided they cleared them and built a house there. This policy has promoted the emergence of these wooden dwellings, adapted to the local resources and needs of immigrant families. The house of Peyregras, modified in the sixteenth century, thus bears witness to the economic and social evolution of the region.

The name "house with stacking" was popularized by researchers of the 20th century, although earlier comparisons, such as Jules Mommeja's in 1903, already evoked similarities with Scandinavian constructions. These houses are distinguished from other French regions where similar techniques exist, such as in Savoie or Dauphiné, where it is rather referred to as "buildings in room-on-room". Their preservation offers valuable insight into the lifestyles and know-how of the late medieval and reborn era.

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