Construction of the castle XVe siècle (≈ 1550)
Period of building the strong house.
23 décembre 2009
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 23 décembre 2009 (≈ 2009)
Total protection of the castle and interiors.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The castle in its entirety, including its interiors with their four fireplaces, their painted decorations, its courtyard and its enclosure (cad. A 34, 35): registration by order of 23 December 2009
Key figures
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The source text does not mention any names.
Origin and history
Château de la Fouilhouze is a 15th century fortified house in the commune of Varennes-sur-Usson, in the Puy-de-Dôme department. This monument consists of a logis-donjon overlooking an inner courtyard, surrounded by high walls and functionally organized agricultural outbuildings. The ensemble is completed by a circular staircase tower, characteristic of the defensive and residential buildings of that time. The remarkably preserved interiors retain their original arrangements and decorations, including four chimneys and murals, offering a rare testimony of late medieval seigneurial habitat.
Ranked Historic Monument by order of 23 December 2009, the castle is protected in its entirety, including its interiors, courtyard and enclosure. This protection underscores its heritage importance, both for its architecture and for its intact decorative elements. The location of the site, although specified by an address in the Merimée base (5045 La Fouilhuze), remains of a geographical accuracy deemed mediocre (note 5/10), perhaps reflecting the limitations of the available data or the isolation of the monument in its rural environment.
The Château de la Fouilhouze illustrates the model of the strong houses of the lower Middle Ages, designed for both housing and defense. These buildings, often built by the little nobility or the enriched bourgeoisie, combined residential, agricultural and sometimes military functions, reflecting the needs of a changing society at the end of the medieval period. Their preservation, as in this case, allows us to study the lifestyles, spatial organization and construction techniques of the time, while providing tangible heritage for future generations.
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