Crédit photo : Marianne Casamance - Sous licence Creative Commons
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Timeline
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1550-1555
Construction of mill
Construction of mill vers 1550-1555 (≈ 1553)
Built during the Wars of Religion.
1608
Degradation begins
Degradation begins 1608 (≈ 1608)
Mill damaged until the 19th century.
1842
Registration as demolished
Registration as demolished 1842 (≈ 1842)
Cadastres mentioning his partial ruin.
début XIXe siècle
Soil modernization
Soil modernization début XIXe siècle (≈ 1904)
Replacement ground by mortar.
16 septembre 2010
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 16 septembre 2010 (≈ 2010)
Protection of the tower and the area.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The windmill composed of its tower and the plot A 358 on which it is located; the area to be beaten and the parcel A 830 on which it is located: inscription by order of 16 September 2010
Key figures
Évêque de Viviers - Former landowner
Sell the plot to the chestnut.
Châtelain de Donzère - Suspected Sponsor
Purchaser of land for construction.
Origin and history
The windmill of Beauvert, located in Donzère in the Drôme, was built around 1550-1555 on a plot ceded by the bishop of Viviers to the local chestnut. Its construction, during the wars of Religion, explains its defensive character: deep foundations, secure doors and a shrub. The tower, in lime-covered limestone bellows, dominates the landscape with a monumental facade, marked by a monitoring window aligned with the entrance door.
Between 1608 and 1842, the mill suffered major deterioration, to the point of being declared "demolished" on the 19th century cadastres. Yet its tower remains intact today. Inside, the ground floor served as an attic and shed for flour bags, while the floor was home to two grinding wheels, a fireplace and a closet, suggesting occasional use as a miller's habitat. The conical rotation system, typical of the provençal mills, was operated via a rack on a "sleeping path" in slabs, as the archaeological traces attest.
Excavations revealed an area to beat the grain south of the tower, confirming its central role in local grain production. Ranked a Historic Monument in 2010, the mill stands out for its hybrid architecture, combining milling and military adaptations. The plot and the area to be beaten are protected, highlighting the heritage importance of this vestige of the sixteenth–XIX centuries.
At the beginning of the 19th century, interior arrangements (lime mortar floor) partially modernized the structure, without altering its original design. The conical cap, now extinct, made it possible to orient the wings according to the wind, an ingenious mechanism for the time. The mill thus illustrates the evolution of agricultural techniques and the historical tensions of the region, between religious conflicts and economic needs.
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