Add turret and berries vers 1500 (≈ 1500)
Lace with depressed arches, decorative crenelage.
fin XIVe - début XVe siècle
Construction of the broken arch door
Construction of the broken arch door fin XIVe - début XVe siècle (≈ 1525)
Front door to the turret, Gothic style.
1615
Mention in compoix
Mention in compoix 1615 (≈ 1615)
Owned by François de La Serre.
1634
Redesigns by Henri de La Serre
Redesigns by Henri de La Serre 1634 (≈ 1634)
Expansion with matt and stable.
22 juillet 1963
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 22 juillet 1963 (≈ 1963)
Door protection, facades and turret.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Door to street; facades on the courtyard; stair turret (cad. F 149): entry by order of 22 July 1963
Key figures
François de La Serre - Owner in 1615
Henry's brother, quoted in the compoix.
Henri de La Serre - Captain-Chatelain de Cabrières
Responsible for the reorganizations in 1634.
Origin and history
The house at 17 rue de la Foire in Pézenas is an example of medieval civil architecture, mainly dating from the 15th century. Its front door, adorned with a broken arch with flat boudins, suggests an earlier origin, probably the end of the 14th century or the very beginning of the 15th. This entrance, shifted from the inner courtyard, contrasts with later elements such as the polygonal staircase turret, whose lintel consists of three depressed arches superimposed. These details, as well as the bays on the ground floor and the remains of a decorative crenelage, allow to date this part around 1500.
The street of the Fair, the major shopping street of the old Pézenas, housed houses reflecting the prosperity of the city. This house has marked stylistic features: interior doors in accolade, door-windows with intersected mouldings, and heeled columns, typical of the 15th century ending. These decorative elements indicate a neat construction, probably intended for an affluent family or a notable local. The older entrance door could come from a pre-existing structure, integrated during construction or subsequent overhauls.
In the 17th century, the house underwent major renovations under the impulse of Henri de La Serre, captain-châtelain de Cabrières. In 1634 he enlarged the property by incorporating a patu (court) and a stable, mentioned in the compoix (cadastre) of 1615, when the house belonged to his brother Francis. These transformations changed the initial configuration, notably by linking the house to the current address of 12, Cours Jean-Jaurès. The elements protected today, such as the gate on street, the facades on courtyard and the stair turret, were inscribed in the Historical Monuments by order of 22 July 1963.
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