First mention of the fief 1508 (≈ 1508)
Written attestation of the Breuil estate.
XVIIe siècle
Construction of the house
Construction of the house XVIIe siècle (≈ 1750)
Construction of the main body in U.
XIXe siècle
West Wing Added
West Wing Added XIXe siècle (≈ 1865)
Regularization of architectural composition.
24 août 2015
Registration Historic Monument
Registration Historic Monument 24 août 2015 (≈ 2015)
Protection of facades, chapel and dovecote.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Manoir du Grand-Breuil: the following parts: facades and roofs of the buildings surrounding the two courtyards; chapel and dovecote in total, as delimited by a red border and represented in red on the plan annexed to the decree (cad. C 273, 279): registration by order of 24 August 2015
Key figures
Information non disponible - No name cited
Sources don't mention any characters.
Origin and history
The Grand Breuil mansion, located in Saint-Savin (Nouveau-Aquitaine), finds its first records written in 1508 in the form of a fief. The estate is structured around two square courtyards arranged in a line along an east-west axis, with a main U-shaped house, built in the seventeenth century and oriented north-south. The balance of the whole, marked by great architectural coherence, was strengthened in the 19th century by the addition of a western wing, which regulated the composition without altering its original harmony.
The protected elements of the mansion include the facades and roofs of the buildings surrounding the courtyards, as well as the chapel and the dovecote, inscribed as Historic Monuments by order of 24 August 2015. The site illustrates a mastered architectural evolution, where later modifications (such as those of the 19th century) contributed to perfecting the overall aesthetic rather than denature it. The accuracy of its location is considered satisfactory (level 7/10), with an address confirmed in the Merimée base: Le Grand Breuil, 86310 Saint-Savin.
The fief du Breuil, attested as early as 1508, suggests an ancient seigneurial or agricultural occupation, typical of the rural areas of Poitou. Although the sources do not specify the original owners, the spatial organization of the mansion — with its closed courts and its U-house — reflects the canons of noble or bourgeois residential architecture of the seventeenth century, adapted to the needs both defensive, agricultural and representative. The extensions of the 19th century, often linked to modernizations or changes in usage, reflect a desire to preserve the stylistic unity of the place.