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Château de Roquepiquet à Verteuil-d'Agenais dans le Lot-et-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Château fort
Château de style Renaissance
Lot-et-Garonne

Château de Roquepiquet

    149 Domaine de Roquepiquet
    47260 Verteuil-d'Agenais
Crédit photo : Picasa - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1470
First act mentioned
avant 1584
Fortification of the castle
5 avril 1606
Denomination stop
1657
Recognition of the nobility of the castle
11 mai 1657
Restoration of the nobility
1739
Modernization project
vers 1860
Neo-Gothic Restoration
1908
Completion of transformations
16 septembre 1997
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle; chapel; bridge; porch leading to the garden; Pigeon; compartment garden; façades and roofs of the two wings of the communes adjoining the body of houses and orangery (see Box. AE 22-25, 50): registration by order of 16 September 1997

Key figures

Arnaud de Caumont - Lord of Lauzun Cede Roquepiquet in 1470 to Mathurin de Gervain.
Mathurin de Gervain - First known occupant Receives the den in 1470 to restore it.
Gabriel de Gervain - Protestant Lord Fortify the castle before 1584.
Jean de Gervain (1633–1681) - Probable chapel builder Funeral chapel built under his command.
Léopold Payen - 19th century architect Directed the first neo-Gothic campaign around 1860.
Lucien Dubarry de Lassalle - Architect of the 20th century Supervises the second restoration campaign in 1908.
Édouard André - Landscaper (1902–1904) Recomposes the gardens and park of the castle.
Jean de Gervain (1633-1681) - Probable chapel builder Funeral chapel attributed to his initiative.

Origin and history

The Château de Roquepiquet, mentioned as early as 1470 in an act of arrest signed by Arnaud de Caumont, lord of Verteuil, was then a den abandoned since the Hundred Years' War. This document gives the noble house and its lands to Mathurin de Gervain, a Poitevin Damoiseau, who is responsible for establishing and cultivating the place. This type of contract reflected the desire to revive the exploitation of the neglected areas in Agenais after the conflict. However, there is no evidence to confirm its fortification on that date.

During the Wars of Religion (before 1584), Gabriel de Gervain, great-grandson of Mathurin and Protestant, strengthened the castle by adding ditches, drawbridge, slots, mâchicoulis and cannons. These arrangements, typical of the religious tensions of the time, cause a conflict with his suzerain, the lord of Verteuil. The intervention of the king of Navarre, to whom a son of Gabriel had joined, made it possible to settle the dispute. Gervain's family, the owner of the site, was challenged in 1606 and 1656 by the court of aide, before finally being confirmed in 1657 for the castle and its preclotures.

In the 18th century, a estimate of 1739 proposed by the Knight of Roquepiquet, the king's engineer, provided for improvements to modernize the house ("make the house convenient and the exterior graceful"). Today, only a rock decoration remains in Madame de Gervain's bedroom and the west façade of the entrance pavilion, dated 1740. The funeral chapel, probably built by Jean de Gervain (1633–81), bears witness to the family anchoring on the estate.

The neo-Gothic countryside from the mid-19th to early-20th centuries radically transformed the castle. Around 1860, architect Léopold Payen erected a south-east circular tower, while the northwest entrance tower was raised. A second phase, initiated in 1866 by the artist-archaeologist Léo Drouyn but realized only in the 20th century by Lucien Dubarry de Lassalle, adds a south-west square tower, a terrace, and harmonic facades and interior decorations (dated 1908 engraved on a turret). At the same time, landscapers Denis and Eugene Bühler (1857) and Édouard André (1902–1904) redesigned the park, orangery and gardens.

The castle, transmitted by inheritance to Gervain's family until the 20th century, was finally inscribed in the Historical Monuments in 1997. Its history reflects the architectural and social changes of the Ages, from the post-war reconstructions of the Hundred Years to the romantic restorations, to religious conflicts and issues of nobility under the Old Regime.

External links