First mention of the fief XIe siècle (≈ 1150)
Fief attached to Lisois d'Amboise, sénéchal d'Anjou.
XIVe siècle
Construction of the tower
Construction of the tower XIVe siècle (≈ 1450)
Estimated date of current vestige.
1920
City acquisition
City acquisition 1920 (≈ 1920)
Loches buys the tower.
2 février 1926
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 2 février 1926 (≈ 1926)
Official protection of the vestige.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Tour de Mauvières (Box BH 91): Order of 2 February 1926
Key figures
Lisois d’Amboise - Senechal d'Anjou
Owner of the fief in the 11th century.
Foulques Nerra - Lord of Loches
Suzerain of Lisois d'Amboise.
Origin and history
The Mauvières Tower is the last vestige of a medieval castle located at the end of a rocky spur on the town of Loches, in Indre-et-Loire, two kilometers south of the main castle. This strategic site, integrated with the city's defensive system, locked the entrance of a valley to the south, playing the role of advanced post.
Mauvières' fief, attached to the estate of Loches, has been attested since the 11th century. It then belonged to Lisois d'Amboise, Senechal d'Anjou and close to Foulques Nerra, lord of the nearby castle. The current tower, the only surviving structure, dates from the 14th century. Its five floors, now without interior fittings, keep traces of floors and chimneys. The walls, in large limestone apparatus, frame a block of irregular bellows.
Acquired by the town of Loches in 1920, the tower was classified as a historic monument in 1926. From the original castle, there are only a few walls and galleries dug in the hillside, one of which, according to local tradition, linked the site to the castle of Loches. These remains testify to the strategic importance of the site in the medieval defensive network of the region.
The architecture of the tower, although partially ruined (disappearance of the roof and upper floors), illustrates the military construction techniques of the Middle Ages. Its current state allows us to study the heating and internal partitioning systems, typical of the dungeons of the era. The tower is now communal property and is subject to heritage protection.
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