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Château de L'Échelle dans les Ardennes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Ardennes

Château de L'Échelle

    6 Grand'Rue
    08150 L'Échelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Château de LÉchelle
Crédit photo : HenriDavel - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIIe siècle
Presumed Foundation
XVe siècle
Occupation by Armagnacs
1594
Wedding of Antoine de La Marche
1604
Construction of the scald
28 septembre 1642
Spanish attack
1730
Acquisition by the Reims chapter
1789-1799
Sale as a national good
XIXe siècle
Conversion to communal school
1926
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle: inscription by decree of 19 July 1926

Key figures

Antoine de La Marche des Contes - Governor of Sedan (1599-1640) Transformed the castle in the seventeenth.
Anne de Maucourt - Wife of Antoine de La Marche Marriage in 1594, seigneurial origin.
Simon Pottier - Hat and revolutionary buyer Acheta the castle as a national good.

Origin and history

The Château de L'Échelle, located in the village of the same name in the Ardennes, has its origins at least in the 13th century, although its current structure dates mainly from the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries. A first castle, probably founded in the 13th century, was bordered by the Potae lands, depending on the chapter of Reims. In the 15th century, it was occupied by a band of Armagnacs that ravaged the area. This strategic site, transformed over the centuries, still bears the stigma of past conflicts, including the impact of the Spanish attacks of 1642.

In the 16th century, Antoine de La Marche des Contes, governor of Sedan from 1599 to 1640, became lord of L'Échelle by his marriage to Anne de Maucourt in 1594. He undertook important work to give the castle its present appearance, notably by adding a square scald dated 1604, now called Tour aux Boulets in memory of the Spanish looting of 1642. When he died in 1640, the castle passed into various hands before being acquired in 1730 by the chapter of Reims, which converted him into a farm. The French Revolution made it a national property, sold to an individual before being partially surrendered to the commune.

In the 19th century, the castle was adapted to accommodate civil functions: town hall, communal school and housing of the teacher. Part of the buildings, including the north wing, now houses a museum dedicated to the school yesterday, recreating the atmosphere of classrooms from the 1900s to the 1960s. The building, registered as a historic monument in 1926, is now wholly owned by the municipality. Its quadrangular architecture, marked by circular towers, a 17th-century steeple and almost blind walls, bears witness to its defensive past and successive transformations.

The east wing, accessible by a terrace built on ancient moat, has a facade adorned with the city coat of arms and a semicircular staircase leading to the floor formerly reserved for the teacher. In the west, a barn crosses the building via a carriageway, while the Tour aux Boulets in the northwest corner recalls the violence of 1642. These architectural elements, combined with its turbulent history, make the Château de L-Échelle a living testimony to the Ardennes heritage, combining military, agricultural and educational functions.

External links