Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Castle of Pechrodil dans le Tarn-et-Garonne

Tarn-et-Garonne

Castle of Pechrodil

    186 Impasse de Pech Rodil
    82330 Varen

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1155
First mention of Perrodil Fats
1285
Royal tribute
XIIIe siècle
Active strength
1381, 1388–1389, 1576
Enemies
1620–1622
Apogee seigneurial
1793
Revolutionary Ranch
1809–1825
End of line
XIXe siècle
Dismantling
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Pierre Gros (XIIIe siècle) - Knight and Co-Lord of Najac First Gross of Perrodil cited in the archives (1155).
Guillaume Gros de Perrodil - Lord in 1285 Pays tribute to the king for the castle.
Pierre Gros (XVIIe siècle) - Governor of Saint Antonin Represses the Huguenot revolt in 1620.
Claire d’Ax - Tutor and widow Invent the estate in 1622.
Jean-Baptiste de Gros - Last resident lord Pay the revolutionary ransom in 1793.
Guy Clément Gros - Heir dead in Madrid Death in 1809 marking the family decline.

Origin and history

The castle of Pechrodil, located in Varen en Tarn-et-Garonne (Occitan region), was from the 12th to the 19th century the uninterrupted seat of the Gros de Perrodil family, descendant of knights linked to Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val and Najac. Built on an oppidum at the end of a natural peninsula formed by Aveyron, this strategic site, surrounded by ditches and towers, was transformed in the seventeenth century into an elegant residence while retaining its defensive functions. His lords, owners of fiefs between Aveyron and Viaur, exercised low justice and protection of the population during the Wars of Religion and the Hundred Years War.

The etymology of Pechrodil (or Puechrodil) reflects the topography of the place: puech (rounded occitan hill) and rodil, interpreted as "wheel" (referring to the nearby rodet mill), "ganger" (erosion by the river), or "red" (red falise and family Gules weapons). The castle, the centre of a prosperous agricultural seigneury, housed mills, chènevières, presses and herds, while its cellars served as a prison. Its Renaissance portal, towers and dungeon overlooking the valley made it a symbol of local power, despite successive occupation by road, English (1388–1389) and Huguenots (1576).

The French Revolution partially spared Pechrodil: the Gros family, reduced to the surname Gros and declared "housewife", avoided emigration by paying a ransom (metals and ammunition in 1793). However, the 19th century marked its decline. Without direct heir after the death of Guy Clément Gros (1809) and his brother (1825), the estate was fragmented, sold, and dismantled for its stones. In the 21st century, there remains only a turret-pigeon, remains of cellars, and scattered architectural elements (pathways, portals) in the surrounding area, notably at Cornusson Castle.

The archives reveal a luxurious seigneurial life in the 17th century: inventories of 1622 describe silverware, precious fabrics, weapons, and food reserves, while the castle housed stables, house of the farmer, and a three-mill mill on Aveyron. The local legend evokes a gulf beneath the river, miraculously rejecting the lords of Perrodil, and a cursed underground linking Pechrodil to Ratayrens, explaining the rocky chaos of Sommard Hill. These accounts highlight the symbolic grip of the seigneury on a territory marked by hemp, religious conflicts, and a geography shaped by erosion.

Architecturally, Pechrodil was an elongated quadrilateral of 30 meters by 8, flanked by towers and a dungeon overlooking the ravine, renovated in the 17th century with Renaissance decorations (Ionic pilaster gate, now moved). The adjacent farm body (60 meters long) housed barns, stables, and a closed vegetable garden, illustrating the self-sufficiency of the estate. The present, though fragmentary, remains and the descriptions of the period allow to reconstruct a military, agricultural and residential ensemble, witness to seven centuries of Occitan history.

External links