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Château de la Rongere à Houssay en Mayenne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Mayenne

Château de la Rongere

    Chemin de Halage Sud
    53360 La Roche-Neuville
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère
Château de la Rongère

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
1239
First feudal mention
1545-1571
Construction of Renaissance Castle
1675
Inventory of art objects
1794
Caulan attack
1991
Historic Monument Protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs of the castle (Box A 3): inscription by decree of 16 May 1991; Parc de la Rongère with the main driveway, all the accompanying built elements such as pavilions and factories, hydraulic installations and dry moats (also on Houssay commune) (cad. A 1-17, 22): classification by decree of 10 October 1991

Key figures

Jacques de Château-Gontier - First known lord Receives the Rongere in dowry in 1239.
Guillaume Quatrebarbes - Resistant Lord Welcomed the Duke of Rohan in 1571.
Henri-Frédéric de Chavagnac - Marquis and last lord Husband of Henriette-Françoise de Montecler in 1797.
Jean Bézier - Knight of Saint-Louis Welcomed to the castle during the Revolution.
Hyacinthe-Jeanne de Montecler - Marquise émigré Imprisoned under the Terror in 1793.

Origin and history

The Château de la Rongere, located in Saint-Sulpice in the department of Mayenne (Pays de la Loire), finds its origins in the 13th century with the mention of H. de Rongeria in 1239. This fief, initially moving from Château-Gontier, was given by the seigneur of Laval to Jacques de Château-Gontier, husband of Avoise de Laval. The right of high justice was recognized in 1404 and 1431, without ever obtaining the title of chestnut. A first mansion, replaced between 1545 and 1571 by a Renaissance castle, housed remarkable art objects, such as Flemish tapestries and paintings, inventoried in 1675.

In the 17th century, the castle was modernized and embellished with terraces, gardens overlooking the Mayenne, and a portrait gallery of the Froulay family. During the French Revolution, he became the refuge of the Marquise Henri-Frédéric de Chavagnac, born Montecler, who welcomed Jean Bézier, the future knight of Saint-Louis. The facades and roofs, as well as the park with its factories and hydraulic installations, were protected as historical monuments in 1991 (registration for the castle, classification for the park).

The site was strategically important, with a ferry and a port on the Mayenne, a place of passage for processions and toll ships. A chapel dedicated to St.James, founded in 1365, was served by chaplains mostly from the family Quatrebarbes, lords of the place for four centuries. The latter, Catholics despite the religious tensions, marked the local history, as evidenced by the resistance of Guillaume Quatrebarbes against the Duke of Rohan, Protestant leader, in 1571.

The seigneury then passed to the Menon and then to the Montecler in the 18th century, before being inherited by the Chavagnac through two marriages with the Montecler sisters. The Marquis de Montecler, emigrated during the Revolution, saw his wife imprisoned under the Terror. The castle, now privately owned, preserves traces of this turbulent history, mixing architecture, feudal power and memory of religious conflicts.

Among the remarkable elements are a mill mentioned as early as 1355, a carriageway attacked by Chouans in 1794, and luxurious interior decorations (tapisseries des Gobelins, silverware). The ensemble illustrates the evolution of a Mayen seigneury, from imaginary 13th century crusades to revolutionary upheavals.

External links