Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Registered MH
Key figures
Bertrand de Saussan - Coseigneur de Laroque
Offered the bell in 1630
Richelieu - Cardinal and Minister
Ordonna cut the dungeon
Origin and history
Laroque Castle is a medieval fortress built between the 11th and 12th centuries, located in the eponymous village of the Hérault department in the Occitan region. Former strategic watchman, he controlled access to the Herault Valley, demonstrating his defensive role in a period marked by feudal tensions and territorial surveillance needs. Its architecture, including the 36-metre pentagonal dungeon (today reduced to 27 metres), reflects the military techniques of the time, although its upper part was modified after the Rohan Wars by order of Richelieu.
The building includes several remarkable elements, including a dungeon of the 10th and 12th centuries, a 12th and 13th century house body, and a 11th century castral chapel, enlarged in the 14th century. The chapel, partially installed in an old military schauguette, preserves traces of its religious and defensive use, as the mâchicoulis still visible. The seigneurial residence, renovated in the 16th century, bears the coat of arms of the family of La Roque, local coseigneurs, and houses a baptismal vats made of stone, vestige of the original chapel.
Ranked as historical monuments since 1979 for its facades, roofs, staircase and chapel, the Château de Laroque illustrates the architectural and political evolution of the Languedoc strongholds. The bell of the dungeon, offered in 1630 by Bertrand de Saussan and classified since 1942, recalls the link between seigneurial power and community life, while the modifications suffered (such as the cut off of the dungeon) highlight the upheavals linked to the 17th century conflicts.
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