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Chandoiseau Manor aux Trois-Moutiers dans la Vienne

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir

Chandoiseau Manor

    3 Route de Chinon
    86120 Les Trois-Moutiers
Private property
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Manoir de Chandoiseau
Crédit photo : A. RICHARD - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
XIe siècle
Initial construction
1429 (fin février)
Supposed passage of Joan of Arc
XVe siècle
Reconstruction of the mansion
6 février 1929
Registration for Historic Monuments
2006
Start of restorations
2011
Restoration of latrines
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Le manoir : inscription by decree of 6 February 1929

Key figures

Jean Odart (1375–1459/60) - Lord of Chandoiseau and adviser to Charles VII Last Odart owner, fighting in Gascony.
Isabeau Odart - Heir of Jean Odart Wife Raymond de Corguilleray, transmitting the mansion.
Jacques de Sainte-Marthe (1517–1587) - Doctor of kings and lord First Sainte-Marthe owner, buried in Fontevraud.
Denis de Sainte-Marthe (1650–1725) - Great Prior and Man of Letters Last Sainte-Marthe related to the mansion.
Antoine Richard - Owner restorer (XXI century) Started saving the mansion in 2006.
Jeanne d’Arc - Historical figure (local tradition) Supposedly stayed one night in 1429.

Origin and history

The Manor House of Chandoiseau, formerly known as the Manor House or Champdoiseau, is a 15th-century building located in the commune of Trois-Moutiers (Vienna, New Aquitaine). It replaces an earlier construction of the 11th century, demolished to reuse its materials. The current manor, of quadrangular shape, is surrounded by ditches and has a central well. It was listed as a historical monument on February 6, 1929.

The first owners identified were the Odart, a family of horsemen from Loudunais in the 12th century. A younger branch owns Chandoiseau, while the older one holds Verrière. Jean Odart (1375–1459/60), adviser to Charles VII, was the last representative of this line. His daughter Isabeau married Raymond de Corguilleray, then the mansion passed into the hands of the Sainte-Marthe in the 16th century, notably Jacques (physicist of the kings Henry II to Henry III) and his brother Louis, a man of letters.

The mansion consists of a main house body, two towers (one round and one hexagonal with screw staircase), and sled windows. A private chapel, mentioned in 1545, was founded by a former lord. Traditionally, Joan d'Arc had stayed there in 1429. After centuries of decline, the mansion, transformed into a farm, was restored from 2006 by Antoine Richard.

The remarkable elements include four 15th-century chimneys, an overturned keel frame, and mâchicoulis on the southwest tower. The latrines, rebuilt in 2011, no longer correspond to the original state. The manor house, attached to the Mothe-Chandeniers estate in 1630, was sold as a national property in 1809 before being abandoned until its recent restoration.

Among the notable owners were Charlotte de la Haye (1501), François de Téligny, and the Sainte-Marthe, including Denis (1650–1725), Grand Prior of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. Their extinction marks the decline of the mansion, which has become an agricultural dependency. The archives mention farm leases in the 17th and 18th centuries, reflecting its progressive agricultural use.

External links