Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Logis de Beaulieu in La Laigne en Charente-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Logis

Logis de Beaulieu in La Laigne

    Beaulieu
    17170 La Laigne
Private property

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1475
First known lord
1539
First written entry
1623
Expansion of the domain
1691
Sale to a commoner
1776
Construction of the fountain
milieu XVIIIe siècle
Home restoration
1989
Domain rescue
2 mars 1993
Partial classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Forged iron grill closing the courtyard (cad. A 414): entry by order of 2 March 1993

Key figures

Guillaume des Chaulmes - Lord of Beaulieu First owner known in 1475.
Suzanne Desmier - Heir and owner Expanded the estate in 1623.
Julien Gaillardon - Aquifer Acheta Beaulieu in 1691 after colonial fortune.
Jean-Louis Admyrauld - Mayor, Deputy and Prefect Owner in the 19th century, local political figure.
Louis-Gabriel Admyrauld - Deputy and Officer Heir of the estate, Lieutenant Colonel artillery.
Famille Prouzeau - Modern restaurants Save the home from ruin since 1989.

Origin and history

The house of Beaulieu, located in La Laigne in Charente-Maritime, is mentioned as early as 1539 as a vassal seigneury of La Laigne under the Ancien Régime. Equipped with seigneurial rights (bass justice, dovecoier, stationer), the land passed into the hands of noble families: the Desmier in the 16th century, then the Chaumonts and Bidault in the 17th century, before being sold in 1691 to Julien Gaillardon, an enriched commoner in Guadeloupe. After estate sharing in the 18th century, the estate was rebuilt and embellished, with architectural elements such as a well dated 1776 and interior woodwork.

In the 18th century, the house was restored and took its present form: a central body flanked by two wings in return for square, framing a courtyard closed by a wrought iron gate (classified in 1993). Two cylindrical towers, vestiges of an ancient 15th–12th century castle, remain at the ends of the building. The estate, surrounded by outbuildings (damaged farm, dovecote, hangars), remains in the Admyrauld family from the 18th to the 20th century, with figures like Jean-Louis Admyrauld, mayor of La Laigne and deputy under Napoleon.

In 1989, the Prouzeau family acquired Beaulieu and began its restoration to save him from ruin. The site preserves 18th-century chimneys, woodwork and a fountain dated 1776. Although partially modified over the centuries (addition of wings in the 17th century?), the house bears witness to the architectural and social evolution of a rural seigneury, from the wars of Religion to the French Revolution.

The archives reveal a complex succession of owners, reflecting matrimonial alliances and land strategies of local elites. Among them, Suzanne Desmier (17th century) expanded the estate by buying the fief neighbour of Roussillon, while Catherine Bidault, her half sister, passed it on to the Gittons before its sale to Gaillardon. The Admyrauld, a rock traders, marked the history of the place in the 19th century, with personalities like Louis-Gabriel Admyrauld, MP and artillery officer.

The architecture combines defensive elements (medieval towers) and classical arrangements (lucarns, stairs in square towers). The entrance gate, the only element protected by historical monuments, illustrates the prestige of the estate in the modern era. Today, Beaulieu remains a preserved example of Charentais seigneurial heritage, between medieval heritage and transformations of the Enlightenment.

External links