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Piegut Tower in Piegut-Pluviers à Piégut-Pluviers en Dordogne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Dordogne

Piegut Tower in Piegut-Pluviers

    Place de la Tour
    24360 Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Tour de Piégut à Piégut-Pluviers
Crédit photo : Fonquebure - Sous licence Creative Commons

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
1199
Seated by Richard Coeur de Lion
XIIIe siècle
Construction of dungeon
1336 et 1426
Taken by the English
1569
Occupation by Coligny
XVIe siècle
Addition of ramparts
1946
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Tour de Piegut: inscription by order of 3 October 1946

Key figures

Richard Cœur de Lion - King of England Asiegea and destroyed the castle in 1199.
Coligny - Admiral and Protestant leader He moved into the tower in 1569.

Origin and history

The Piegut Tower is the circular dungeon of a medieval castle built in the 13th century in Piegut-Pluviers, Dordogne. This monument, now isolated, was part of a larger citadel, destroyed in 1199 during a siege led by Richard Lion's Heart. Its typical architecture, with one dome per floor, illustrates the defensive techniques of the era.

During the Hundred Years' War, the tower was taken twice by the English, in 1336 and 1426, highlighting its strategic role in the Franco-English conflicts in Aquitaine. In the 16th century, it was surrounded by ramparts, but fell into ruin long before the Revolution. In 1569 Admiral Coligny temporarily established his headquarters there during the Wars of Religion, marking its importance in the religious struggles of the century.

Classified as a historical monument in 1946, the Piegut Tower remains a rare testimony of 13th century military architecture in Périgord. Its present state, though degraded, allows to study medieval circular dungeons and their evolution in response to defensive needs. The town of Piegut-Pluviers, integrated into the Périgord-Limousin regional nature park, preserves this heritage as a symbol of its turbulent history.

External links