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House, 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle in Malestroit dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Maison classée MH

House, 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle in Malestroit

    21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle
    56140 Malestroit
Private property
Maison, 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle à Malestroit
Maison, 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle à Malestroit
Maison, 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle à Malestroit
Maison, 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle à Malestroit
Maison, 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle à Malestroit
Maison, 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle à Malestroit
Maison, 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle à Malestroit
Crédit photo : Pymouss - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVIe siècle
Construction of house
30 juin 1933
Historic Monument Protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façade sur rue et Roof (AZ 48) : inscription by decree of 30 June 1933

Key figures

Information non disponible - No characters cited in the sources The archives do not mention an owner or artisan.

Origin and history

The house at 21 Rue du Général-de-Gaulle in Malestroit is a 16th-century civil building typical of Renaissance Breton architecture. Its granite facade, adorned with a front door on the ground floor, is surmounted by a semicircular niche. Upstairs, two rectangular windows framed with columnettes or toers, as well as two triangular pediment windows, animate the whole. Several sculpted, naive designs add an artisanal character to this construction.

Classified as a Historic Monument, this house saw its street façade and roof protected by decree of 30 June 1933. The cadastre identifies the property under the reference AZ 48. Although its original use is not specified in the sources, its architectural style suggests a bourgeois or artisanal residential function, common in the Breton cities of that time.

The location of this monument, in the old Grande-Rue (now Rue du Général-de-Gaulle), indicates its integration into the historical urban fabric of Malestroit, a city marked by its medieval past and its commercial role in inland Brittany. The decorative elements, though modest, reflect the influence of local workshops and regional constructive traditions of the 16th century.

External links