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Reignac Fort House in Tursac en Dordogne

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Maison forte
Dordogne

Reignac Fort House in Tursac

    D706
    24620 Tursac
Ownership of the municipality
Maison forte de Reignac à Tursac
Maison forte de Reignac à Tursac
Maison forte de Reignac à Tursac
Maison forte de Reignac à Tursac

Timeline

Paléolithique
Mésolithique
Néolithique
Âge du Bronze
Âge du Fer
Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1505000 av. J.-C.
1504900 av. J.-C.
0
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Paléolithique supérieur (Magdalénien)
First occupations
1386
First written entry
XIVe siècle
Construction of the façade
1508
Window drilling
1667
Latin inscription
1915
Stay of Foujita
1964-1966
Historical monument classification
2006
Open to the public
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Gisement pehistorique dit de la Maison-Forte de Reignac (case AN 34 to 38): classification by decree of 25 April 1966

Key figures

Jaquemet de Reignac - 14th century cruel Lord Exercising low justice in Reignac
Alphonse Claret de Fleurieu - Owner in the 20th century Welcomed Foujita in 1915
Tsuguharu Foujita - Japanese painter Residence in Reignac in 1915-1916
Eugène Le Roy - Regionalist writer Summon Reignac in *Jacquou le Croquant*

Origin and history

The fort house of Reignac is an exceptional castle-falese, last example intact in France, located in Tursac in Dordogne. Located on the cliffside on the left bank of the Vézère, this strategic site has been occupied since the Upper Paleolithic, as evidenced by the Magdalenian cut flint discovered in 1952. The excavations revealed a continuous occupation until the Iron Age (Hallstatt final), with traces of troglodytic habitats rearranged in the Middle Ages.

Mentioned for the first time in 1386 as Rinhacum (property of Renius), the fort house was built during the Hundred Years' War as a refuge against looters. His lord, Jaquemet de Reignac, known for his cruelty, then exercised low justice under the authority of the troglodytic city next to the Saint Christophe Roque. In the 14th century, the old prehistoric shelters were cleared and the high facade, exploiting topography for an optimal defence: at 40 meters high, access is only possible from the front.

At the beginning of the 16th century (1508), openings were pierced in the facade, marking the adaptation of architecture to the arrival of firearms. Fortifications (breek, assumers, gunboats) are reinforced, reflecting the tensions of the League's wars. A 1667 Latin inscription (INMOTA MANEBIT, "it will remain unchanged") on a door attests to subsequent changes. The building, 25 meters long, combines stone-cut and small device, with 19 windows, some of them with sleds.

Habited until 1931, the fort house welcomed in 1915 Japanese painters Foujita and Kawashima, invited by Count Alphonse Claret of Fleurieu. Foujita lived there until February 1916 before joining Marzac Castle. Ranked a historical monument in 1964 (façades and roofs) and in 1966 (prehistorical building), it has been open to the public since 2006. Its interior, dug in the cliff, reveals seigneurial spaces (honor room, chapel, cachot) organized according to the Carolingian model (aula, capella, camera).

The site is also linked to legends such as that of Jaquemet de Reignac, nicknamed the "goat of Reignac" for his cruelty, mentioned in Jacquou le Croquant d'Eugène Le Roy. In the 21st century, the fort house attracted 65,000 annual visitors (2022), combining historical heritage, prehistoric exhibitions and paranormal folklore.

External links