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Washhouse of Lavatoggio en Haute-corse

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine rural
Lavoir
Haute-corse

Washhouse of Lavatoggio

    Le village
    20225 Lavatoggio
Crédit photo : Pierre Bona - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
XIXe siècle
Construction
29 juillet 1987
Registration for Historic Monuments
2 décembre 2022
Amendment of the protection order
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The communal wash-house, in total, on the uncadastral communal road, below the church. A plan is annexed to the order: registration by order of 29 July 1987, as amended by order of 2 December 2022

Key figures

Information non disponible - No character cited The source text does not mention any historical actors.

Origin and history

The Lavatoggio washhouse is a small communal building built in the 19th century, specifically under the Second Empire. This historic monument illustrates the public facilities of the period, designed to facilitate the daily tasks of the inhabitants. The structure, made of local granite, is backed by a retaining wall and opens with a broken arch on the façade. Inside, two rectangular masonry vats, lined with granite slabs, collect water projected from an opening pierced into the bottom wall, demonstrating a simple but efficient hydraulic system.

This wash, inscribed in the Historical Monuments by decree of 29 July 1987 (then modified in 2022), reflects the importance of collective water points in Corsican villages. These spaces, often located near churches or central squares, served as places for female sociability and the transmission of oral traditions. Their sober architecture, adapted to local resources such as granite, integrates harmoniously with the traditional built landscape of the island.

The location of the washhouse, below the church of Lavatoggio, underlines its role in the spatial organization of the village. Owned by the commune, it now embodies a preserved vernacular heritage, although its geographical accuracy is considered "a priori satisfactory" (note 6/10). Available sources, such as the Mérimée and Monumentum base, confirm its status as a key element of the communal heritage, linked to the rural history and ancestral water practices of Corsica.

External links