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Grail Manor en Ardèche

Ardèche

Grail Manor

    155 Le Grail
    07320 Devesset

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1459
First feudal mention
1558
Chimney dated
25 décembre 1621
Marriage uniting families
4 septembre 1794
Revolutionary inventory
16 février 1794
Execution of the Abbé du Grail
20 janvier 2006
Heritage Registration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Guilhelmin del Gralh - First certified member Mentioned in 1459
Isabeau du Grail - Last heir Wife Godefroy of Bernard
Claude de Bernard de Talode du Grail - Abbé and refractory priest Guillotiné in 1794
Charles de Bernard - 19th-century novelist Descendant and friend of Balzac
Godefroy de Bernard - Lord of Talode Husband of Isabeau du Grail

Origin and history

The Grail mansion, located in Devesset in the department of Ardèche, is a strong house whose first records date back to 1459. A feudal recognition of this year describes it as a square house covered with lauzes, surrounded by outbuildings (grange, courtyard, garden) and land extending over about 70 ceterces. This document already reveals an agricultural and residential structure typical of the strong houses of the time, combining seigneurial habitat with land exploitation.

In 1794, a revolutionary inventory detailed an inner organization on three levels, with eight pieces distributed symmetrically around a central vestibule. The ground floor had a kitchen and a living room, while the upper floor had a bedroom with alcove. Decorative elements, such as a Bergamo tapestry called "old and bad" or antique chairs, suggest furniture inherited from previous centuries. This inventory coincides with the death sentence of Abbé Claude de Bernard de Talode du Grail, guillotined at Puy-en-Velay for his status as a refractory priest.

The architecture of the manor combines 16th century remains — brace, scauguettes, linteau en accolade, fireplace dated 1558 — with 20th century reshuffles, such as the addition of works on the main façade. The materials (melloons and granite-cut stone) and the lauze roof, partially replaced by slate for scalds, illustrate the local constructive techniques. The Grail family, then Bernard de Talode, owned the estate from the 14th century until the 1970s, marking a rare seigneurial continuity.

The archives mention notable members of this lineage, such as Guilhelmin del Grailh in 1459, or Isabeau du Grail, the last heiress, who married Bernard's Godefroy in 1621, thus uniting the two families. Their descendant, Abbé Claude de Bernard, embodies the tragic fate of many clerics during the Revolution. In the 19th century, Charles de Bernard, a novelist and friend of Balzac, perpetuated the family name in literary circles.

The Grail mansion was listed in the General Inventory of Cultural Heritage in 2006, recognizing its historical and architectural value. The transformations of the 20th century, although changing its appearance, did not erase the medieval and modern traces that bear witness to the social and political evolutions of the Ardèche, from the Middle Ages to the contemporary era.

External links