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Castle of Prat à Prat-Bonrepaux dans l'Ariège

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château Médiéval et Renaissance
Ariège

Castle of Prat

    Château de Prat 
    09160 Prat-Bonrepaux
Château de Prat
Château de Prat
Château de Prat
Crédit photo : PierreG 09 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1139–1312
Period of Counts of Comminges
1268
First written entry
1529–1543
Renaissance transformation
1788
Acquisition by Roquemaurel
1802–1907
Era of the Counts of Nouaillan
14 octobre 1997
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle with its door, terraces and retaining walls (cad. C 750, 751, 753): registration by order of 14 October 1997

Key figures

Jean II de Mauléon - Bishop of Saint-Bertrand-de-Cominges Transforming the fortress into Renaissance castle
Étienne de Nouaillan - Count Owner (1802–1907) Modernized the castle (water, electricity)
Louis-Victor Gesta - Artisan Toulouse glassmaker Author of the chapel window

Origin and history

The castle of Prat, located in the Couserans on the edge of the Comminges, occupies a rocky piton at 380 meters above sea level, at the confluence of Salat and Gouarège. This strategic site, probably an ancient Roman oppidum as attested by mosaics in the inner courtyard, served as a vigy on a major axis of passage since Antiquity. The first mention of a fortress dates from 1268, then owned by the Counts of Comminges, who established the Barony of Prat there until 1312. The castle remained a defensive outpost of the valley, combining dominant position and supervisory role.

Between 1529 and 1543 Bishop John II of Mauléon radically transformed the fortress into Renaissance castle. He shaved towers, reduced the external defences, and added decorative elements such as carved sill windows (sirens, dragons, salamanders) in the 16th century Toulouse style. The front door, known as the "Porte François 1er", became a masterpiece of the place, adorned with its episcopal coat of arms and the motto Nondum venit hora mea. The interior changes, such as the remodeled 15th century stairway, reflect this transition between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.

The castle changed hands several times: from Mauléon (1370–1611) to the barons of Montpezat, then to François Le Fol de Garaud in 1631, before being acquired by Aimé de Roquemaurel in 1788, on the eve of the Revolution. In the 19th century, Count Étienne de Nouaillan introduced modernity (water, electricity, heating) and restored elements such as the large living room or chapel, with a stained glass window by Louis-Victor Gesta. After 1907, under the Counts d'Avancourt, the castle degraded for lack of maintenance, before experiencing several changes of owners in the 20th and 21st centuries.

Ranked a historic monument in 1997 for its defensive elements (porterry, terraces, retaining walls) and its interior decorations (eighteenth century gypseries, stained glass windows), the castle of Prat remains a private property not open to the public. Its architecture still mixes today the traces of its medieval origin (circular enclosures, crenelate tower) with Renaissance or neo-renaissant additions, such as the 19th century wing or the hybrid staircase tower.

External links