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Windmills from Ardenay to Chaudefonds-sur-Layon en Maine-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine rural
Moulin
Moulin à vent
Maine-et-Loire

Windmills from Ardenay to Chaudefonds-sur-Layon

    8 Rue des Moulins
    49290 Chaudefonds-sur-Layon
Moulins à vent dArdenay à Chaudefonds-sur-Layon
Moulins à vent dArdenay à Chaudefonds-sur-Layon
Crédit photo : Grefeuille - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1771-1779
Construction of Grand-Moulin
1787
Construction of Petit-Moulin
1905
Decommissioning of Petit-Moulin
1914-1918
Grand-Moulin stop
27 mai 1976
Registration for historical monuments
4e quart XIXe siècle
Upgrading of mills
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Windmills of Ardenay (two) (cad. A 1383, 1385): entry by order of 27 May 1976

Key figures

Famille Coigné - Mill builders Originally the two buildings at the end of the 18th century.

Origin and history

The Ardenay windmills, located at Chaudefonds-sur-Layon in Maine-et-Loire, are two buildings built at the end of the 18th century by the Coigné family. The first, the Grand-Moulin, was erected between 1771 and 1779, while the second, the Petit-Moulin, bears the date of 1787, probably that of its construction. These mills, originally called Poyeau's mills, were equipped with Berton wings in the 4th quarter of the 19th century, with an upgrade of one floor for the West Mill. They ceased their activity at the beginning of the 20th century: the Petit-Moulin in 1905 and the Grand-Moulin during the First World War.

The site, located at 77 metres above sea level, dominates the Loire Valley and is aligned on an east-south-east/west-north-west axis to capture the prevailing winds. The Grand-Moulin, transformed into a home, retains three floors, while the Petit-Moulin, empty of its mechanisms, has kept its original two-storey structure and its engine shaft. The two mills, accompanied by millers' houses, were registered as historical monuments by decree of 27 May 1976, bearing witness to the importance of the Angelvin rural industrial heritage.

The Coigné family, at the origin of their construction, illustrates the local entrepreneurship of the time, where mills played a central role in the agricultural economy. Their decommissioning in the 20th century reflects technological and economic changes, marking the end of an era for traditional renewable energies. Today, the site remains a remarkable example of milling architecture, preserved for its historical and landscape value.

External links