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Château d'Épanvilliers à Brux dans la Vienne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Vienne

Château d'Épanvilliers

    D7
    86510 Brux
Crédit photo : Esrogal - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1530
Initial construction
2 mai 1541
Debt proof
1770–1782
Classical reconstruction
XVIIIe siècle (vers 1775)
Interior renovation
1991
Fire of the commons
2012
Opening of the museum
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs of the castle itself with its two pavilions as well as those of the two wings including the chapel; portal and moat; the staircase with its wrought iron ramp and the following rooms with their decor: the small living room, the small dining room, the room called Madame de Maintenon on the ground floor and the room Louis XV on the first floor; the interior of the chapel in the south wing (cf. E 508, 547, 548, 561, 562) : inscription by decree of 11 June 1980 - Castle; façades and roofs of the southern building of the communes (cad. E 508, 547, 548, 562): registration by order of 14 April 1997

Key figures

Jacques et André Montalembert - Initial constructors Indebted brothers for the castle (1530).
Gabrielle Montalembert - Inheritance Send the castle to the Tryon.
Marquis de Tryon - Agricultural innovator Creates an educational farm (XVIIIe).
Marquise de Tryon - Renovator Remove the inside around 1775.
Berchtold Rordorf - Current Owner Founded the game museum (2012).

Origin and history

The Château d'Épanvilliers, located in Brux in Vienna, finds its origins in the 15th century with a tower of housing integrated into the building at the beginning of the 16th century. It was built around 1530 by the brothers Jacques and André Montalembert d'Essé, who were heavily indebted for its realization, as evidenced by a document of 1541. This castle, of Louis XIV style after its renovation, passed into the hands of the Tryon in the 18th century by inheritance via Gabrielle Montalembert, wife of Pierre Tryon.

In the 18th century, the Marquis de Tryon established an educational farm, one of the first of the Poitou, welcoming up to 50 farmers whose activities are recorded in detailed records. Around 1775, the Marquise de Tryon undertook an interior overhaul and built gardens. The castle, which preserved decorative elements of the eighteenth century (like a wrought iron staircase), was partially destroyed by fire in 1991 (south wing of the communes), then restored.

Ranked a historic monument in 1980 (castle, moat, gate, chapel, staircase and interior rooms) and in 1997 (southern communes), the castle changed hands in the 20th century. Purchased in 1974 by Jean-Robert Lorzil (instructor), it was restored and opened to the public before being sold in 1995 to Berchtold Rordorf, who installed a museum of the old game in 2012. Today, it visits the summer and bears witness to five centuries of architectural and agricultural history.

The building retains two pavilions, two wings (including a chapel with missing decorations), and more than 20 rooms furnished from the 18th century. Its architecture combines Renaissance heritage (round the 15th century) and sober classicism of the 1770–82s, period of partial reconstruction by the Tryon. The archives also mention its role in local agricultural innovation, with a model farm starting in the 18th century.

External links