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70km
The first fortress was destroyed during the Hundred Years' War. The present castle (15th century) stands in the centre of the town.
Pascal Renoux is a wrought iron craftsman who produces knives and, for lovers of medieval arms, helm, breast-plate, helmet.
To arrange an appointment : +33 5 45 78 89 72
Also to be seen : the Romanesque church. The "Beau" runs through the village which contains a Romanesque church (12th century), touching through its modest proportions, the round shape of the apse and the quality of its sculptures (modillions and capitals).
A paddle wheel and millstone form this old mill still working on the river Né. Demonstration and production of walnut oil.
Info : +33 5 45 75 74 50
Poultry for roasting, fresh mulard ducks for foie gras are available at the farm.
Telephone beforehand : +33 5 45 78 11 92
Fed on cereals and guaranteed GMO-free, this goraille (pork) is a delight. Sausages, grillons (a coarse paté), cutlets are on sale at the farm.
Info : +33 5 45 78 31 77
The Romanesque church of Saint-Hilaire is covered with a row of cupolas similar to the cathedral in Angoulême which inspired it.
Following his break-up with Marie d'Orval and his political misadventures, Alfred de Vigny returned to the land of his ancestors, the Maine Giraud at Champagne-Vigny. He tended his vines, distilled his eaux-de-vie and wrote his most famous poems ("La mort du loup, la bouteille à la mer").
Visit the house and the distillery : +33 5 45 64 04 49
At the crossroads of ancient roads (the Roman way from Saintes to Lyons) the church of Saint-Cybard stands in the middle of the fields.
Things to see : its bell tower covered with stone scales, its round apse with arcades and columns, the rich decoration and fine detail (heads of humans and animals), the whiteness of the stone.
And on 1st July, behold the light
The off-centre oculus joins forces with the sun on 1st July, Saint-Cybard's day, to produce beams of light inside the church.
The village is constructed round the collegiate church of Saint-Arthémy. This curious church appears almost lopsided from the inside. It is as if the stonemasons built the church without taking any account of the surroundings.
Things to see : the multifoil gothic portal, the fine vegetal décor (hollyhocks, vines), the 15th and 16th century frescoes uncovered in the nave.
In mid-June, arts and hearts are romantic : theatre, cinema, music, painting
On a hillside in the valley of the Né stands the Templar chapel of Cressac (12th century). The sober simplicity of the architecture contrasts with the dazzling illumination of the pigments on the walls, the frescoes relating the fights of knights from Angoulême and Poitiers during the crusades.