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House Issaurat à Salernes dans le Var

Var

House Issaurat

    5 Rue Edouard Basset
    83690 Salernes

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1684
Initial acquisition
1685
Gypsum work
1719
Enlargement
1796
Sale and division
XIXe siècle
Installation of cellars
2021
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The following parts of the house Issaurat: the entire building body on street; the tanks on the first floor of cellars of the building on garden located 5 rue Édouard Basset, shown in the cadastre section AI on Parcel No. 560, as delimited in red on the plans annexed to the decree: inscription by order of 20 October 2021

Key figures

Balthazard Issaurat - Owner and sponsor Family at the origin of the home.
Louis Aurenges - Mason and craftsman Realized the stairs and chimneys.
Joseph Aurenges - Mason and craftsman Collaborated in gypsum work.

Origin and history

The house Issaurat is a 17th-century bourgeois residence in Salernes, Var department. It stands out for its architecture adapted to a steeply steep terrain, with vaulted cellars, two square floors and a floor of attic. The house, divided into two distinct parts, combines a coherent structure at the front and heterogeneous additions at the back, organized around a central corridor and a stairwell.

Acquired in 1684 by the Issaurat family, an affluent family of Salernes, the house was enlarged in 1719 by the purchase of a nearby building. In 1685 Balthazard Issaurat entrusted the brothers Louis and Joseph Aurenges, masons of Cotignac, with gypsum work, including a staircase suspended with balusters and chimneys. Sold in 1796, it was divided into several apartments, and its cellars were converted into vats for the wine trade in the 19th century.

In 2021, the Issaurat House was listed as a historic monument and was protected for its building on the street and its tanks in the cellars. It bears witness to the social and economic history of Salernes, particularly through its link with local wine production and its architectural evolution over the centuries.

External links