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Château de Bois-lès-Pargny dans l'Aisne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Aisne

Château de Bois-lès-Pargny

    2-4 Rue Georges Landa
    02270 Bois-lès-Pargny
Château de Bois-lès-Pargny
Château de Bois-lès-Pargny
Crédit photo : G.Garitan - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1611
Construction of the castle
1722
Adding a brick wing
1927
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Donjon: by order of 24 June 1927

Key figures

Famille de Maubeuge - Sponsors of the castle Builders in 1611 according to anchors.

Origin and history

The Château de Bois-lès-Pargny is a 17th-century building located in the municipality of the same name, in the department of Aisne. It is distinguished by its dungeon, classified as a historic monument in 1927, and its architecture combining pink and sandstone bricks. The Louis XIII tower, with its corbelled turrets, carries wrought iron anchors dating from 1611, year of construction by the Maubeuge family. This castle illustrates the aristocratic residential architecture of the period, with defensive elements still visible.

The guard room, vaulted on the ground floor, bears witness to the strategic importance of the place. A contiguous brick wing, added in 1722, completes the whole. The castle, with its typical materials (bricks, sandstones) and architectural details (anchors, turrets), reflects stylistic evolutions between the beginning and the end of the seventeenth century. Its ranking in 1927 underscores its heritage value.

The monument is part of the landscape of the Picard castles, an area marked by feudal history and then aristocratic. At the time of its construction, the castles served both as seigneurial residences and as symbols of power. The Maubeuge family, mentioned as a sponsor, probably belonged to the local nobility, playing a role in the administration or defence of the region. The pink brick, a common Picardie material, and the sandstone for the bases, were pragmatic and aesthetic choices typical of regional architecture.

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