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Windmill of Lancieux en Côtes-d'Armor

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine rural
Moulin
Moulin à vent
Côtes-dArmor

Windmill of Lancieux

    65 D786
    22770 Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Moulin à vent de Lancieux
Crédit photo : Latitemimi - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVIe siècle
Initial construction
1758
Partial repair
4 mars 1791
Sale as a national good
1875
Major modernization
1926
Installation gas engine
1947
Final judgment
9 septembre 1975
Registration Historic Monument
1976 et 1990
Restorations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Windmill (Doc

Key figures

François L’Hotellier - First owner post-Revolution Buyer of the mill in 1791.
Mathurin Lemonnier - Local miller Owner after Hotelier.
Auguste Lemonnier - Meunier and legatee Leaves the Dinan hospice mill.
François Chapelle - Last active miller Death crushed by machine around 1925.
Jean Peillet - Refueller Directs the work of 1976.

Origin and history

The Bénédictins windmill, also called the Buglais windmill, was built on the municipality of Lancieux (Côtes-d'Armor) in the 16th century by the monks of the Abbey of Saint-Jacut-de-la-Mer. Built of granite and shale, this typical tower mill in Great Britain is distinguished by its circular shape, its swivel roof in chestnut shingles, and its four helical wings of 24 meters wide. Inside, two pairs of grinding wheels mounted "in English" (a date of 1874) were grinding wheat and secondary cereals, operated by a system of cast iron wheels added in the 19th century.

The mill, originally owned by the abbey, was sold as a national property in 1791 to François L In 1875 he underwent major modernization with the addition of a ball regulator (invented by James Watt) and a poor auxiliary gas engine in 1926. Operating until 1947, it was bought by the commune in 1973 and restored in 1976 and 1990, regaining its mobile wings and operational mechanism. Today it is listed in the Historical Monuments (1975), symbolizing Breton milling heritage and opening to the public in summer.

The site preserves traces of its religious and agricultural history: the monks of Saint-Jacut crossed the bay at low tide to access it, while the local farmers milled their grain until the mid-20th century. The mill, equipped with a "pipper" orientation system (movable tail) and a brake actuated via a skylight called a knife, illustrates the ingenuity of pre-industrial techniques. Its large diameter (145 cm) wheels, made of Champagne Brie and assembled on site, bear witness to the artisanal exchanges of the time.

Ranked for its collected proportions and its traditional materials (schiste, gneiss), the Buglais mill is the last surviving windmill in Lancieux. Its adjacent employer housing, built in the same materials, completes the whole. After its 1925 auction to the Jouët family — including François Chapelle, the last active miller — the mill finally ceased operations in 1947, marking the end of a centuries-old milling era in North Brittany.

External links