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Château du Fresne en Mayenne

Mayenne

Château du Fresne

    2 Le Château du Fresne
    53640 Champéon

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1469
Seigneurial transaction
1589
Initial construction
1680
Mass Foundation
1688
Establishment of the foundation
XVIIe siècle
Reconstruction
17 avril 1986
Registration MH
8 septembre 2008
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Ranked MH

Key figures

Jean de Landepoutre - Local Lord Unloaded with 15 floors in 1469.
Jean de Vendosme - Lord of Lassay Author of the transaction of 1469.
Henriette et Marie-Catherine de Beauregard - Calvian religious women Founders of three Masses in 1680.
François de Beauregard - Lord of Fresne Mentioned on the chapel bell.
Renée de la Dufferie - Wife of François de Beauregard Name engraved on the bell.
Michel Cibois - Refugee Vicar Stayed at the castle in 1798.
René Morice (Monte-à-l’assaut) - Chef Chouan Lived in the Petit-Frêne in 1799.

Origin and history

The château du Fresne, also known as château du Frêne, is a 16th-century building built in 1589 on a granite plate, located in Champéon, in the department of Mayenne, 2,500 meters southwest of the village. This medieval castle, surrounded by moat and equipped with an artificial pond, houses a dovecote on rare columns, erected on an island in the middle of the moat. Historically, he was a member of the fiefs of Lassay and Mayenne, with records of seigneurial transactions as early as 1469 between Jean de Landepoutre and Jean de Vendosme, seigneur of Lassay.

Reconstructed in the 17th century and then remodeled and decorated in the 18th century, the castle preserves a large room decorated with woodwork and paintings, as well as a room depicting the judgment of Solomon on the haze of a fireplace. The moat also gird the gardens. The chapel, partly dated from the 14th century, is distinguished by its ogival door, its curved window and a high gable. It houses a bell dedicated to François de Beauregard and Renée de la Dufferie, linked to a mass foundation established in 1688 after family trials.

Two elements of the castle have been listed as Historic Monuments since September 8, 2008: the two ground floor rooms and the pigeon house. The chapel and its outbuildings have been registered since 17 April 1986. The site is also associated with local figures such as Michel Cibois, vicar refugee at the castle in 1798, and René Morice, dit Monte-à-l'assault, a Chouan resident in Petit-Frêne in 1799.

External links