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House of the sixteenth century à Tréguier en Côtes-d'Armor

House of the sixteenth century

    20 Rue Colvestre
    22220 Tréguier
Private property
Maison du XVIe siècle
Maison du XVIe siècle
Maison du XVIe siècle
Maison du XVIe siècle
Maison du XVIe siècle
Maison du XVIe siècle
Maison du XVIe siècle
Maison du XVIe siècle
Maison du XVIe siècle
Crédit photo : GO69 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVe siècle (début)
Presumed initial construction
1588-1598
Possible partial destruction
1612
First archival record
1651
Description in a confession of succession
Fin XVIe - début XVIIe siècle
Replacement of wood strip
17 décembre 1926
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facade and Roofing (Box AB 219): Registration by Order of 17 December 1926

Key figures

Henry de Kergrec’h - Lord of the Verger and Prevost of Tréguier Owner in 1612, influential noble
Jullien Robin - Renter in 1612 Artisan related to the cathedral?
François Garjan - Knight and Lord of Kerverzault Owner in the 18th century
Daniel Leloup - Historician or architect Proposed a reconstitution
Nicole Chouteau - Local historian Arts Studies Robin

Origin and history

The House of the 16th century, located 22 Colvestre Street in Tréguier (Côtes d'Armor), is a remarkable example of Breton Renaissance civil architecture. Its grey granite facade, adorned with flamboyant Gothic openings (archives on the ground floor, sled windows on the first floor), bears witness to a refined craftsmanship. Originally, a wood-paned floor in corbellation overlooked the street, later replaced by a stone masonry after its probable destruction during the League wars (1588-1598). The house adopts a three-way plan centered on a 3.15-metre-diameter screw stairwell, serving five levels, including two between floors. Its spatial organization suggests a vocation both residential and professional, perhaps linked to a craft workshop (goldsmith or jeweller), protected by a monitoring system via a juda in overhang.

The house is distinguished by its private chapel on the second floor, an exceptional element in a Breton urban house. Equipped with a niche and credence for liturgical objects and two hagioscopes (openings to see the altar from adjacent rooms), it reveals the importance of domestic worship for its occupants. A window bay (now gone) and statue-carved consoles completed this sacred space. The stairway tower, initially surmounted by a dovecote accessible by a secondary turret, preserves remains of Armo-American frame with earth hounds. The house offered a panoramic view of Saint-Tugdual Cathedral, its western porch, and the mouth of the Tréguier River, highlighting its high social status.

The archives mention the house as a "great noble house of Kericuf" in 1612, owned by Henry of Kergrec, lord of the Verger and provost of Tréguier in 1593. Rented to Jullien Robin (perhaps an artisan linked to the cathedral), she passed in 1651 to her heirs, then in the 18th century to François Garjan, knight and lord of Kerverzault. His later designation as "the Duke's house Jean V" seems to be a post-Ancien Régime attribution, with no historical basis verified. Ranked a historic monument in 1926 for its facade and roof, it illustrates the architectural evolution of Breton urban hotels, between medieval tradition (pan of wood, hagioscopes) and Renaissance innovations (symmetry, cut stone).

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