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House of Bishops à Puissalicon dans l'Hérault

House of Bishops

    72 Rue Cave des Consuls
    34480 Puissalicon
Private property

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
2000
1322 (incertaine)
Probable date of construction
1368
Acquisition of the seigneury
2021
Purchase by a Swedish couple
2023
Diagnosis by Inrap
23 septembre 2024
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The medieval building and the well, in total, located 1 impasse of the Grappe, cadastres section B No. 2491 and No. 2494, as delimited in red on the plan annexed to the decree: inscription by decree of 23 September 2024

Key figures

Guillaume de la Broue - Archbishop of Narbonne (1245–1257) Suspected Sponsor, native of Puissalicon
Pierre de La Jugie - Archbishop of Narbonne (1347–175) Family related to Clement VI
Hugues de La Jugie - Bishop of Béziers then Carcassonne Brother of Peter, possible sponsor
Clément VI (Pierre Roger) - Pope (1342–1352) Brother-in-law of La Jugie, patron
Nicolas de La Jugie - Lord of Puissalicon (from 1368) Presumed owner family

Origin and history

The so-called "Évêques" house was built in the 14th century in Puissalicon, in the enclosure of the village of L'Herault. Its architecture recalls the Avignonnais liveries, urban residences of the cardinals during the papacy of Avignon. The large hall (aula) and the frame, dated by dendrochronology between 1076 and 1322 (with uncertainty due to the absence of separate sapwood), suggest a construction linked to the influence of local noble families, such as the Jugie, close to Pope Clement VI.

The history of the building remains partly enigmatic: no archival document confirms its sponsor, although the local tradition attributes it to the archbishops of Narbonne. Among the hypotheses, Guillaume de la Broue (archbishop from 1245 to 1257, native of Puissalicon) or the brothers Pierre and Hugues de La Jugie (archbishop of Narbonne and bishop of Béziers/Carcassonne in the 14th century) are mentioned. Their family, enriched by Clement VI, could have financed this home, close to the Avignon architectural standards.

Used as an agricultural building until its acquisition in 2021 by a Swedish couple, the house was subjected to an archaeological diagnosis by the Inrap in 2023, culminating in its inscription in the Historical Monuments on 23 September 2024. The facade, combining Renaissance and late Gothic elements, as well as a medieval well, are now protected. His recent study revives the hypothesis of a livery linked to the Pontifical Court of Avignon, rare example in Languedoc.

The house illustrates the links between Comtat Venaissin (papal land) and Biterrois, as well as the role of ecclesiastical elites in medieval civil architecture. Its recent rescue contrasts with its agricultural past, marked by opposition from its former owners to any heritage protection before 2021.

External links