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Château de Thérac aux Gonds en Charente-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Charente-Maritime

Château de Thérac

    Le Bourg
    17100 Les Gonds
Crédit photo : De Jaucourt - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1288
Residence of Bishop Gimer
XVe-XVIe siècles
Renaissance reconstruction
1697
Partial destruction
1791
Sale as a national good
14 avril 1997
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Entry châtelet (Case AD 126): entry by order of 14 April 1997

Key figures

Gimer - Bishop of Saints First known occupant in 1288.
Giuliano Soderini - Sponsor of work Responsible for Renaissance development.
Nicolas Le Cornu de La Courbe de Brée - Resident bishop The castle was occupied before 1697.
Guillaume de La Brunetière du Plessis-Gesté - Bishop of Saints Ordained destruction in 1697.

Origin and history

The castle of Thérac, located in Les Gonds in Charente-Maritime, finds its origins in the Middle Ages as property of the bishops of Saintes. As early as 1288 Bishop Gimer lived there, marking his religious and seigneurial importance. The site, originally medieval, is profoundly redesigned in the Renaissance under the impulse of Giuliano Soderini, whose works today leave only the chapel in ruins. This castle, structured around two enclosures separated by a floodable ditch, illustrates the defensive architecture of the period, with an entrance to cylindrical towers equipped with canonary arches and a wooden steeple.

In the 17th century, Bishop Nicolas Le Cornu de La Courbe de Brée and later Bishop Guillaume de La Brunetière du Plessis-Gesté occupied the site, the latter ordering its partial destruction in 1697 because of its state of disrepair. The estate, which was sold as a national property in 1791 after the Revolution, nevertheless retained some remarkable elements: a 17th century barn, remnants of courtine, and an 18th century house joined to the ruins. The entrance chestnut, intact with its original frame and round path, bears witness to the transition between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Ranked a historic monument in 1997, the site now combines medieval traces and later additions, offering a panorama of the architectural and political evolution of the region.

The architecture of the castle reflects its dual role as episcopal residence and fortress. The courtyard, protected by the pepper chestnut, was home to outbuildings, while the court of honour, now extinct, hosted the seigneurial house. The commons built in the 19th century have narrowed the original space, but the cross frame of St Andrew's barn and the classic decorations of the 18th century house recall the successive adaptations of the site. The ditches, once floodable, and the mouths of the towers highlight its military past, contrasting with the pilasters and bandages added later, symbols of a changing ecclesiastical nobility.

External links