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House à Issoudun dans l'Indre

House

    3 Place du Marché aux Légumes
    36100 Issoudun
Private property

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1ère moitié du XIXe siècle
Construction of house
19 juillet 1963
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs, including shopfronts (Case VI 3, 330): inscription by order of 19 July 1963

Key figures

Information non disponible - No characters cited in the sources Sources insufficient to identify

Origin and history

This house in Issoudun, in the Indre department, dates from the first half of the 19th century. It illustrates the Empire architectural style, characteristic of this post-revolutionary period marked by a return to classical order and elegance. Its portico decorated with columnettes supports a decorative band composed of interlaced semi-circles and lyre-shaped motifs, typical of Napoleon's imperial aesthetic. The shopfront, integrated into the façade, bears witness to the commercial vocation of the building from its very beginning.

Classified as a Historical Monument by order of 19 July 1963, this house is distinguished by the protection of its facades, roofs and front (cadastre VI 3, 330). Its location, in 2 Place Saint-Cyr (or close to Place du Marché aux Légumes according to geographical sources), places the monument in the heart of the historic urban fabric of Issoudun. The Empire style, although brief in the history of French architecture (1804-1815), has long marked the provincial city centres, where the local elites adopted these codes to display their modernity and alignment with central power.

Registration as Historic Monuments underscores the heritage value of this building, both for its architecture and for its state of conservation. The neat decor of the bandeau and the lyres, combined with the structure of the portico, makes it a representative example of the bourgeois boutiques of the time. These decorative elements, often inspired by Greco-Roman antiquity, were designed to evoke imperial grandeur while serving as a showcase for local commerce, reflecting the ambition of provincial cities under the First Empire and Restoration.

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