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Digoine Castle en Saône-et-Loire

Saône-et-Loire

Digoine Castle

    230 Chemin du Château de Digoine
    71490 Saint-Martin-de-Commune
Bourgeois, ou Phototypie Bourgeois Frères, imp. à Chalon-sur-Saône (Saône-et-Loire). « Collection des Châteaux de Bourgogne ».

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1359
Presumed construction date
Début XVe siècle
Ownership of the lords of Damascus
Vers 1548
Acquisition by the Malain
1732
Transmission to Falletans
Début XIXe siècle
Restoration by the Count of Musy
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Seigneurs de Damas - Owners in the 15th century First noble family mentioned.
Famille Malain - Owners around 1548 Acquirers of the estate.
René de Loriol et Livie de Chandieu - Owners (17th-15th centuries) Noble couple who possessed Digoine.
Marquis Jean Prosper de Falletans - Owner from 1732 Heir by marriage.
Comte de Musy (Charles) - Restaurant restaurant in the 19th century Responsible for major transformations.
Comte de Prunelé - Owner in the 20th century Heir to the Count of Musy.

Origin and history

The castle of Digoine is located in the commune of Saint-Martin-de-Commune, in Saône-et-Loire, in a natural setting marked by a pond, the creek of Crissey and surrounding woods. Its architecture consists of two bodies of house in square: L ́un, rectangular and flanked by two square towers, presents a scald of troubadour style; The other, almost square, could be the layout of an old dungeon in the 19th century. This second building is framed by a polygonal tower and a round tower. Private property, the castle is not visited.

The date of 1359, engraved on a kitchen chimney, is the only tangible indication of its initial construction. In the 15th century, the estate belonged to the lords of Damascus, then passed about 1548 into the hands of the Malain family. In the 17th and 18th centuries, René de Loriol and his wife Livie de Chandieu became owners, before the castle was passed on by marriage in 1732 to the Marquis Jean Prosper de Falletans.

At the beginning of the 19th century, ruined, the castle was sold to a relative of the Falletans, the Count of Musy. The latter undertook important restorations: reconstruction of the communes, the creation of an English-speaking park and the addition of a southern pavilion. The estate was then transferred in the 20th century to the Count of Prunlé, grandson of the Count of Musy. The transformations of the 19th century, including the addition of neo-Gothic or romantic elements such as ecauguette, reflect the architectural tastes of the era.

External links