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Fortifications and clock tower of Pouancé à Pouancé en Maine-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Fortification
Maine-et-Loire

Fortifications and clock tower of Pouancé

    2-20 Rue de la Porte Angevine
    49420 Ombrée d'Anjou
Fortifications et tour de lhorloge de Pouancé
Fortifications et tour de lhorloge de Pouancé
Crédit photo : Romain Bréget - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1900
2000
XIIIe–XVe siècles
Period of evolution of the castral site
1929
Registration MH of the Angelvine Gate
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Tower of the Clock called Porte Angevine: inscription by decree of 25 March 1929

Key figures

Anaïs Casaubon - Historical Author of a thesis on the castle (2012).
Célestin Port - Local historian Author of a dictionary on Maine-et-Loire.
Jean-Claude Meuret - Researcher Studies on Pouancé and its castral heritage.

Origin and history

The fortifications of Pouancé form a medieval architectural complex located in the present town of Ombrée d'Anjou, Maine-et-Loire. Among these remains, the Angevin Gate, also known as the Clock Tower, is the most emblematic element. This building was officially recognized for its heritage value by an inscription as historic monuments in 1929, marking its importance in local and regional history.

The precise location of the fortifications is in the department of Maine-et-Loire, on the former town of Pouancé, now integrated in Ombrée d'Anjou. The Angevin Gate, a protected element, is located at 9 Rue de la Porte Angevine. This site is part of a broader historical context, that of the marches between Anjou and Brittany, where fortifications played a strategic and defensive role during the Middle Ages.

The sources available, notably the works of Célestin Port, Jean-Claude Meuret and André Neau, underline the importance of Pouancé as a castral city. Anaïs Casaubon's thesis on the castle of Pouancé (2012) highlights the evolution of the site between the 13th and 15th centuries, confirming its role in the political and military dynamics of the region. These studies provide a historical framework for understanding the original function of fortifications and their transformation over the centuries.

External links