Probable construction vers 1590-1600 (≈ 1595)
Dating compared to the hotel in Verninac (1592).
1821-1868
Partial alignment rue Jaubertie
Partial alignment rue Jaubertie 1821-1868 (≈ 1845)
Reconstruction of No. 4, modification of facades.
XVIIIe siècle
Family property Grivel
Family property Grivel XVIIIe siècle (≈ 1850)
House known as the house Grivel.
28 mars 1958
Registration Historic Monument
Registration Historic Monument 28 mars 1958 (≈ 1958)
Protection of facades and roofs.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Street facades including those of the corner turret and the corresponding roofs (Box H 734): inscription by order of 28 March 1958
Key figures
Famille Grivel - Owner in the 18th century
Give his name to the house.
Origin and history
Brive-la-Gaillarde's house, built in the 16th century, is a remarkable example of Renaissance architecture in local sandstone. It is distinguished by its curved entrance door, its stone screw staircase, and a Louis XII-style corner turret resting on a cul-de-lampe. The second floor skylight, surmounted by a pediment in half moon, as well as the windows of the turret, testify to a careful decor, comparable to that of the hotel of Verninac (1592). These elements suggest dating around the years 1590-1600.
The house is located in the so-called "Sisters" district, with reference to a former convent of nearby Clarisses. She may have sheltered the Sisters' house, although this hypothesis is not confirmed. In the 18th century, it belongs to the Grivel family, with the name Grivel. The facades and the turret, partially redesigned in the 19th century (alignment on rue de la Jaubertie between 1821 and 1868), have retained protected elements since 1958, such as the skylight and the windows of the turret.
The building, probably a former small mansion, illustrates the influence of Louis XII and Renaissance styles in the civil architecture of Limousin. The studded wooden door, the screw staircase, and ground decorations (frontons, missing pinnacles) reflect the prestige of its successive owners. Despite subsequent changes (arasing of the turret, partial reconstruction), the house remains a rare testimony of the bourgeois habitat of the late sixteenth century in the region.
The materials used, local sandstone (brasier) and Grammont sandstone, highlight the regional anchoring of the construction. The missing shield of weapons above the door suggests a noble or easy origin, while the comparison with the hotel of Verninac (1592) reinforces the hypothesis of a late construction in the century. The 19th-century alignment projects altered its original aspect, notably on the rue de la Jaubertia, where a part was rebuilt.
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