Construction of the Romanesque door XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Probably from the church of St. Oustrille.
1687
Purchase of canonical house
Purchase of canonical house 1687 (≈ 1687)
By Canon Moreau before reconstruction.
1688
Start of reconstruction
Start of reconstruction 1688 (≈ 1688)
House rebuilt in pavilion for Moreau.
1691
Extension of the housing body
Extension of the housing body 1691 (≈ 1691)
Addition of a garden and courtyard.
1770
Construction of second pavilion
Construction of second pavilion 1770 (≈ 1770)
Backed to the first house body.
1989
Registration of facades
Registration of facades 1989 (≈ 1989)
South facade and staircase protected.
1992
Ranking of the Romanesque door
Ranking of the Romanesque door 1992 (≈ 1992)
Protection by ministerial decree.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
South facade and outside staircase of the house (Box IK 66): inscription by decree of 21 December 1989; Romanesque door (Case IK 66): Order of 10 February 1992
Key figures
Chanoine Moreau - Home sponsor
Aceta and built the house in 1688.
Origin and history
The Château House, located in Bourges, is a composite building combining two distinct periods. Built in 1688 for Canon Moreau, it replaces an old canonical house acquired in 1687. The original pavilion-shaped building included a vaulted cellar, a kitchen, an upper bedroom, a room and a cabinet. Between 1691 and 1770, extensions were added: a house body, a garden, a courtyard, and a second pavilion backed by the first. The main facade, unchanged since the 17th century, has a rectangular door surmounted by an interrupted pediment and oval shields, symbols of the Moreau family.
The Romanesque door of the 12th century, integrated into the building, would probably come from the church of Saint-Oustriille, an ancient abbey founded before the 6th century. This gate, with its pediments adorned with volutes and modillons, presents an internal voussure decorated with broken sticks and plant motifs, while the external voussure evokes rinseaux in the shape of eight. These stylistic elements are reminiscent of northern Romanesque art, including Norman and Franciscan. The eardrum, replaced between the 18th and 19th centuries, contrasts with the authenticity of the rest of the work.
Classified as a Historic Monument, the house illustrates the transition between the Middle Ages and the classical era. The south facade and the exterior staircase have been registered since 1989, while the Romanesque gate has been classified since 1992. Today, the property of the Cher department, the site preserves traces of its past use, such as the guns of Canon Moreau engraved in the cellar or the remains of the church Saint-Oustriille, reduced to its first Romanesque span and to a crypt buried under a garden.
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