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Château de Médan dans les Yvelines

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Renaissance
Yvelines

Château de Médan

    Rue Pierre-Curie
    78670 Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Château de Médan
Crédit photo : Spedona - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
fin XVe - début XVIe siècle
Construction of hunting lodge
vers 1635
Added farm
XVIe siècle
Transformation into a castle
1750-1777
Expansion of the castle
1873
Wing reconstruction
1926
Historical monument classification
1956
Fire of the castle
1979
Partial protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Entrance pole with its overhead passage; facades and roofs of the contiguous building to the entrance poterno, including the two adjacent towers; small building with lantern of the poterne of the communes; retaining walls of the old garden (cad. A 1937, 1946, 1947, 1948): entry by order of 6 March 1979

Key figures

Jean II Brinon - Patron of Ronsard Owner, welcomed the Pleiade.
Henri IV - King of France He hunted and stayed there regularly.
Jean Bourdin - Chambellan d'Henri IV Added the farm in 1635.
Maurice Maeterlinck - Writer, Nobel Prize There lived and wrote (1924-1949).
Paul Cézanne - Post-impressionist painter Painted three paintings of the castle.
Baron de Dalmas - Owner in the 19th century Reconstructed the wing in 1873.

Origin and history

The castle of Médan has its origins in a 9th century structure, transformed into a hunting lodge at the end of the 15th century for the Perdriel family. In the 16th century, it became a castle in its own right, passing through marriage in the family of Brinon. John II Brinon, patron of Pierre de Ronsard, welcomes the poets of La Pleiade, making the place a major cultural home of the Renaissance. Henri IV regularly stayed there for hunting, and Jean Bourdin, his chamberlain, added a farm around 1635, consolidating his status as an aristocratic residence.

In the 18th century, the Gilbert de Voisins family enlarged the castle with a long wing overlooking the valley, rebuilt in 1873 by the Baron of Dalmas. The French Revolution marked a turning point: the last seigneur was guillotined in 1793, and the estate, sold as a national good. The castle then knew a literary vocation with Maurice Maeterlinck, Nobel Prize winner, who resided there from 1924 and wrote several works, including La Vie des Termites. After a fire in 1956 and a period of abandonment, it was restored by its present owners.

The castle is also linked to art: Paul Cézanne paints three paintings, preserved today at the Burrell Collection in Glasgow. Ranked in the additional inventory of historical monuments since 1926, it embodies both architectural, literary and artistic heritage. After sheltering the newspaper Combat in the 1960s, it is now open to visits by appointment, testifying to its turbulent history and resilience.

External links