Estimated mill construction XVIIe siècle (ou fin XVIe siècle) (≈ 1695)
Presumed period of construction of the two mills.
Juillet 1944
Occupation by SS
Occupation by SS Juillet 1944 (≈ 1944)
Reuse of the large mill as a fortified point.
17 février 2011
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 17 février 2011 (≈ 2011)
Registration of the two mill drums.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Windmills (consisting of two drums) (Box ZB 49): registration by decree of 17 February 2011
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character cited
The source text does not mention any named historical actor.
Origin and history
The windmills of La Mure, located on the hill north of Vassieux-en-Vercors, are part of a set of eight mills erected on this arid plateau of Vercors. Originally, these family buildings were used to grind grain for local residents, responding to a vital need in an area where water resources were limited. Today, only two mills remain: a small round tower, typical of provençal or Languedocian models, and an imposing cylindrical tower. Their interior architecture, although partially extinct, included attices, milling chambers and mechanisms operated by orientable wings thanks to racks.
The precise dating of these mills remains uncertain, although their construction is estimated between the late 16th and 17th centuries. The largest mill, used as a fortified point by the SS in July 1944, illustrates their strategic reuse during the Second World War. After their abandonment as mills, these buildings served as sheepfolds, sheds or lime ovens, demonstrating their adaptation to the changing needs of the community. Their rarity in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, or even in France, makes them remarkable remnants of the rural ingenuity of the past.
Classified as Historical Monuments in 2011, the mills of the Mure are now owned by the municipality of Vassieux-en-Vercors. A renovation project is under way to preserve these unique testimonies, whose wooden elements (measles, mechanisms) have mostly disappeared. Their presence on this site, once essential to the local economy, underlines the importance of windmills in isolated areas, where they were essential collective infrastructure.
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