Initial construction Début du XVIIe siècle (≈ 1704)
Early classic granite style.
18 mars 1930
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 18 mars 1930 (≈ 1930)
Registration of the ruins by ministerial decree.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Château de la Meilleraye (rests of) : inscription by order of 18 March 1930
Key figures
Information non disponible - No names cited in the sources
The texts do not mention any characters.
Origin and history
The Château de la Meilleraye, located in Beaulieu-sous-Parthenay in Les Deux-Sèvres (Nouvelle-Aquitaine), dates from the early seventeenth century. Built in granite, it adopts an architectural style characteristic of this period, with a main house body framed with two wings in return. The ensemble formed a quadrilateral lined with moat, accessible by wooden bridges leading to the courtyard of honour and to the service buildings, of which only the cellars remain today. Its monumental entrance, marked by a doric door with two columns, opened on the reception rooms, reflecting the prestige of its owners.
Ranked a Historic Monument since 18 March 1930, the castle has been the subject of an in-depth study in the exhibition La Meilleraye, the destiny of a family in the 17th and 18th centuries. The current ruins make it possible to imagine its original spatial organization: a central courtyard surrounded by buildings, combining seigneurial houses and outbuildings. The elements protected by the 1930 decree specifically concern the "remnants of the castle", highlighting their heritage value despite their fragmentary state.
Available sources (Wikipedia, Monumentum, Mérimée base) indicate that the site, located in La Grande Meilleraye, retains an official address linked to the municipality of Beaulieu-sous-Parthenay (Insee code 79029). Although the practical information on visits or contemporary uses (rents, guest rooms) is not documented, its inscription as historical monuments makes it a major testimony of the Poitevin castral architecture of the Great Century. The accuracy of its geographical location is estimated at 6/10, indicating a satisfactory but perfectable approximation.