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Castle of Guise dans l'Aisne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Aisne

Castle of Guise

    Chemin de Ronde 
    02120 Guise
Ownership of the municipality
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Château-fort de Guise
Crédit photo : Clubduvieuxmanoir - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Fin Xe siècle
First mention of the castle
1185
Become a royal fortress
1424
Refuge des compagnies de Jeanne d'Arc
1538–1560
Bastioned modernization
1673
Vauban intervention
1914–1918
Destruction during the Great War
1952
Rescue by the Club du Vieux Manoir
2008
Complete classification of the castle
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Le donjon : classification by decree of 22 July 1924 - The castle fort of Guise in total, comprising the fortified enclosure and its glacis (bastions of the Charbonnière, the Moineau, the Haute ville and the Alouette, half moon of land and relief) , the doors (gate of the City, door of the Carrosses and door of Paris) , the guard corps, the first levels of the Government, the prison and the arsenal, as well as the basements of the former collegial church Saint-Gervais and Saint-Protais, and all the basements and archaeological floors (see AV 19, 106 to 108, 110, 112, 114, 117, 130) : classification by decree of 31 July 2008

Key figures

Philippe Auguste - King of France Reconstructed the castle in 1185.
Jean de Luxembourg - Lord of Guise (1424–1440) Finances works via the ransom of Jeanne d'Arc.
Claude de Lorraine - First Duke of Guise Modernizes the fortress (1538–60).
Vauban - Military engineer Adjust the defenses in 1673.
Maurice Duton - Founder of the Club du Vieux Manoir Save the castle in 1952.
François Mandon - Provençal engineer Designs the bastions (XVI century).

Origin and history

The castle of Guise, attested from the end of the 10th century, dominates the Oise valley on a rocky spur. Originally owned by the Counts of Vermandois, he became royal fortress in 1185 under Philippe Auguste, who rebuilt it after its partial destruction during the conflicts between Flanders and Hainaut. The dungeon, probably erected at that time, symbolizes the seigneurial power, while a collegiate dedicated to Saints Gervais and Protais, founded in 1052, houses the burials of the local lords and serves as a parish church until the 16th century.

In the 15th century, the castle was restored by Jean de Luxembourg, then by Charles d'Anjou, who strengthened his defences after the damage suffered during the Hundred Years' War. In 1424 he welcomed the companions of Jeanne d'Arc, including Xaintrailles and Lahire, fleeing the English. Jeanne's ransom, paid in 1431, partially financed this work. The fortress then resists the imperial assaults (1486) and hedgeuyers (1487), thanks to arrangements such as the barbacan of the entrance castle, equipped with archeries suitable for light artillery.

The major transformation took place in the 16th century under Claude de Lorraine, the first Duke of Guise, who modernized the fortress according to the Italian bastioned system, a first in France. Engineers Antonio Castello and François Mandon design a triangular enclosure punctuated with four bastions (Charbonnière, Moineau, Haute-Ville, Alouette), a half-moon of rescue, and counter-mine galleries. The collegiate church, burned in 1545, was rebuilt, while the dungeon, raised from a pepper roof, reached 32 metres. This work makes Guise a key citadel of the Wars of Religion, where the Duke of Guise, opponents of the Reformation, plays a central role.

In the 17th century, Vauban, although considering the fortress "exceptional", was limited to minor adjustments: clearance of entrances, emplacement of the body of place, and reinforcement of half moons. The castle, confiscated by Henry II of Lorraine in 1641, became royal property and resisted Spanish sieges (1650) during the Fronde. The buildings, buried at a level to limit their vulnerability, then house a permanent garrison. In 1767 the dungeon was returned to the prince of Condé, marking the decline of his military role.

The First World War caused massive destruction: used as an observation post by the Germans (1914–18), the castle was shelled by French artillery when it was released in 1917. Only the dungeon and the enclosure remain. Sold as a career in the 1920s, the site was saved in extremis in 1952 by the Club du Vieux Manoir, which undertook its restoration through youth construction sites. Ranked Historic Monument (1924 for the dungeon, 2008 for the ensemble), it is today open to the public and animated by the association, which exhumed the foundations of the collegiate and consolidated the undergrounds.

The architecture of the castle illustrates the evolution of military techniques over a millennium: from the medieval dungeon (walls of 5.75 m thick, ogival chimneys) to the Renaissance bastions (casemates of 40 men, listening galleries of 110 m), to the adaptations of Vauban. The excavations revealed missing elements, such as the Saint-Nicolas chapel of the dungeon or the six circular towers of the early enclosure. The site, owned by the city of Guise, remains a rare example of a fortress surviving repeated sieges, royal reconstructions, and the two world conflicts.

External links