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Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme en Charente

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Logis

Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme

    Chemin de la Chauveterie
    16440 Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Private property
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Logis de Forge à Mouthiers-sur-Boëme
Crédit photo : Germon - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1233
First written entry
XVe siècle
Initial construction
1711
Property of François Gaston Houlier
1781
Purchased by Bernard Sazerac
1943
Site classification
10 juin 2005
Registration Historic Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades and roofs of the buildings constituting the house (C 504, 1254, 1255): inscription by decree of 10 June 2005

Key figures

Alain de Forge - Medieval Lord Mentioned in 1233 in a cartular.
Hugues de Chandry - Lord of Forge Owner in the 14th century.
Chéraud de Chandry - Lord of Forge Successor of Hugues in the 14th century.
François Gaston Houlier - Lord of Plassac Owner in 1711.
Bernard Sazerac - Forgemaker and master Buyer in 1781, founder of stationery.
Geneviève Sazerac - Last heiress Sazerac Died 1969, initiator of restorations.

Origin and history

The house of Forge, located in Mouthiers-sur-Boëme in Charente, is a former building of the 15th and 16th centuries, built near a resurgence exploited from the Middle Ages. Its name, linked to metallurgical activity, evokes its initial role as an iron mill, then wheat and nut oil until the eighteenth century. The site, protected by ditches and a double enclosure, has architectural similarities with the Château de la Foy, such as square turrets and a terrace overlooking the Boëme valley.

In 1233, the cartular of the Abbey of La Couronne mentions Alain de Forge, followed in the 14th century by the Hugues and Chéraud de Chandry lords. In the 15th century, the house depended on La Rochandry's chestnutry and was built during the Hundred Years' War. In 1711, the "measuring of Forge" belonged to François Gaston Houlier, seigneur of Plassac, before being acquired in 1781 by Bernard Sazerac, a tailor and master of forges, who installed a paper mill there, a flourishing activity in Angoumois.

In the 19th century, the estate extended with buildings dedicated to the drying of paper and the housing of workers. The Sazerac family, now Sazerac de Forge, kept the house until 1969, when Geneviève Sazerac, the last heiress, died. Then transmitted to the Beaucé family, the site was restored in the 1930s and ranked in 1943. In 1941, the film Pontcarral was shot there. The facades and roofs were listed in the Historic Monuments in 2005, while the gardens, fed by the resurgence, obtained the label "Remarkable Garden".

The architecture of the house combines defensive elements (fossed, square towers with pyramidal roofs) and Renaissance decorations, such as a skylight adorned with a scallop shell or animal sculptures (monkey, eagle, elephant). Inside, a monumental 15th century fireplace and a vaulted room communicating with undergrounds testify to its medieval past. Although the house is private and non-visitable, its gardens open to the public in summer, offering a preserved setting between historical heritage and nature.

The estate illustrates the evolution of a seigneurial site towards industrial exploitation, marking the economic history of the Charente. Its name, spelled "la Forge" or "Forges" according to the times, reflects this duality between feudal heritage and adaptation to pre-industrial activities, such as stationery that used the hydraulic strength of the resurgence until the 19th century.

External links