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A Brief
History
Founded in 1284 by Jean de Grailly, the
Seneschal of Aquitaine, on behalf of King
Edward I of England, the bastide of Molières
was never finished and therefore never
experienced the urban expansion of
Monpazier. In 1316 Ghilem de Toulouse,
Edward II of England’s seneschal in
Périgord, chose to make Molières his base
and to build his castle there. This too,
remained unfinished. The town was ravaged by
the Hundred Years War then rebuilt only to
be destroyed once more by the ferocious
battles of the Wars of Religion.
The Bastide
The bastide was planned along regular lines
and all its streets converge in the central
square. Molières, the bastide, was never
surrounded by arcaded houses and only the
Bayle House is raised above its arches.
Molières is, nonetheless, a delightful
village with the added charms of a Gothic
church and the ruins of a fortress.
What to See
The Bayle House
Also known as the ‘porch,’ the Bayle House
is all that remains of the arcaded square
which once upon a time provided shelter for
the shops. Traces of two ogival openings
dating from the fourteenth century can be
seen on its east façade.
The Market Place
In the heart of the village, the market
place used to house a covered market hall
which, sadly, no longer exists.
St Jean’s Church
The thirteenth-century fortified church
seems out of all proportion to the small
village. It is Plantagenet Gothic in style
with ribbed vaults and a massive bell tower
protecting the north facade. Battlemented
parapets, destroyed in the nineteenth
century, joined the south and north towers
which were used as reserves in case of
attack. The church was left in ruins by the
Wars of Religion and the process of
restoration only undertaken in the
nineteenth century.
The
Castle
The square, fortified castle was begun in
1316 to protect the village ; only the walls
and part of the tower still survive.
La
Maison de la Noix (The Walnut House)
A former presbytery,
La
Maison de la Noix
now houses exhibits about the walnut : the
various stages of walnut cultivation, the
different varieties of walnut, the different
uses to which the fruit can be put and
examples of walnut wood. La Maison de la
Noix is also home to the mairie.
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