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Château de Gerbéviller en Meurthe-et-Moselle

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Meurthe-et-Moselle

Château de Gerbéviller

    Rue Carnot 
    54830 Gerbéviller
Château de Gerbéviller
Château de Gerbéviller
Château de Gerbéviller
Château de Gerbéviller
Château de Gerbéviller
Château de Gerbéviller
Château de Gerbéviller
Château de Gerbéviller
Crédit photo : François BERNARDIN - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1128
Construction of the first castle
1475-1477
Destroy by Charles the Temerary
1621
Marquisate elevation
1636
Destruction during the Thirty Years War
1750
Reconstruction of the castle
24 août 1914
Fire in the First World War
1996
Overall ranking
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The following parts of the castle estate: the nymph and the Red Pavilion, the Palatine Chapel, the Orangery, the Theatre, the stable and the dovecote, in full; the facades and roofs of the castle, the concierge, the coachhouse and the former farmhouse; all the gardens and the park, the entrance gates, the basins and basins, the greenhouse, the fenced walls and edicles, the chained pillars, the water, the canal, the bridges; the statues of Flora and Atlas, the 19th century cave, the so-called gate of hunters (cf. AK 109, held the Castle, 29 (formerly E917), 99 to 108, 110, 111, 113, 193, 194, held the Castle; At 184, 185, 197, 200, 624, placed Sous le Vivier; At 201 to 206, placed Ele-Champ; At 207 to 209, place called Noire Vallat; AC 286, 287, takes place the Hellichamp; At 122, 135, 136, 630, Placed Basse des Joncs ; D 155, 172, 173, 176, 179, 180, 367, 368, placed Le Village): by order of 10 May 2012

Key figures

Jean Wisse - Owner and reconstructor Buyer in 1470, works in 1485.
Charles-Emmanuel de Tornielle - Superintendent of Finance of Lorraine Park and pavilions (early 17th).
Camille de Lambertye - Rebuilder of the castle Works in 1750, probable collaboration with Boffrand.
Louis-Martin Berthault - Landscape architect English Park (1816).
Albert Laprade - Reconstruction architect Post-fire work (1920-1923).
Clément Métezeau - Architect assigned Nymphaeus and red flag (early 17th).

Origin and history

The château of Gerbéviller, located in Lorraine in the Grand Est, finds its origins in the 12th century with the family of Querford, before passing to the Dukes of Lorraine by marriage at the beginning of the 12th century. A first castle was built before 1240 by Philippe de Lorraine, brother of Ferry II, followed by landscape developments around 1300. The seigneury, passed by dowry to the family of Bar, then to the Counts of Linange-Réchicourt in 1410, was sold in 1470-1485 to Jean Wisse after destruction caused by the troops of Charles the Temerary (1475-1477). The Wisses transformed the castle into a seigneurial house before its passage to the Châtelet by marriage in 1540.

In the 17th century, Charles-Emmanuel de Tornielle, superintendent of finance of the Duke Henri II of Lorraine, modernized the estate: he created an Italian park with a nymph and a red pavilion, attributed to Clement Métezeau. The castle, raised in marquisat in 1621, was destroyed in 1636 during the Thirty Years War on the orders of Louis XIII. The Torniel family kept him until 1737, when he passed to the Lambertye. Camille de Lambertye rebuilt it in 1750, probably with Germain Boffrand, while Yves des Hour redesigned the park.

In the 19th century, Louis-Martin Berthault turned the park into a landscape garden in English (1816) for Antoine de Lambertye. Ernest de Lambertye adds commons, chapel, and winter garden. On 24 August 1914, the fire of the castle during the Battle of the Grand-Couronnene destroyed much of the estate. Reconstructed from 1920 to 1923 by Albert Laprade, he lost his floors but kept his 16 hectare park, classified with his nymph (only in France), his vegetable garden, and his rose garden. Today owned by Prince Charles d'Arenberg, the estate has been classified as a historical monument since 1996 and labeled a remarkable Garden.

The Palatine chapel, founded in the 15th century and given to the Carmelites in 1621, was sold as a national property after the Revolution. Redeveloped between 1860 and 1865 by Ernest de Lambertye to welcome Pope Pius IX, it has been classified since 1986. The estate also includes a 19th-century theatre, an orangery, and outbuildings, reflecting its architectural and landscape evolution over three centuries.

External links