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Château de Pierreclos en Saône-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort

Château de Pierreclos

    1048 Le Château 
    71960 Pierreclos
Private property
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Château de Pierreclos
Crédit photo : Yelkrokoyade - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
887-926
First entries
Xe siècle
Chapel attested
1282
Passage to the Berze
1403
Donation to Ymbaud de Bletterans
1437
Picking of Scoters
1471
Partial destruction
1562
Protestant seat
1665
Purchased by Jean-Baptiste Michon
1789
Revolutionary destruction
1984
Historical Monument
1989
Restoration by the Pidaults
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Entry hook; facades and roofs of the castle, including those of the dungeon and the south and east towers; portal with both pavilions; basement of terrace and enclosure walls; hanging screw staircase and staircase to the main house body; the two chimneys of the kitchens on the ground floor; Laurence's room with its parquet; room of the Guards on the first floor with its fireplace and French ceiling; remaining parts of the chapel (cf. B 257, 263) : entry by order of 21 December 1984

Key figures

Étienne de Berzé - First known lord Take over the castle around 1282.
Ymbaud de Bletterans - Lord in 1403 Receives Louis de Savoie's fief.
Philibert de Rougemont - Knight and defender Resist to Louis XI in 1471.
Jean-Baptiste Michon - Adviser to the King (1665) Modernizes the castle and its portal.
Alphonse de Lamartine - Family friend Michon Witness of revolutionary events.
Famille Pidault - Owners since 1989 Restoration and tourist opening.

Origin and history

The Château de Pierreclos is located in the town of Saône-et-Loire, in the south of the historical Burgundy, now integrated into the Burgundy-Franche-Comté region. Built at the end of a hill overlooking the valley of the Petite Grosne, it dominates a famous vineyard and is located in the immediate vicinity of the Solutré rock and Cluny Abbey. Its origin probably dates back to the fortification of a pre-existing ecclesial enclosure, as suggested by its configuration and anteriority of a chapel attested from the tenth century. The site, mentioned in Cluny's charters between 887 and 926, is part of the construction movement of churches of the years 980-1040.

The first seigneurial traces date back to the 13th century, when the castle passed into the hands of Berzé's family, then to Guy Chevrier in 1366 before being ceded to Louis de Savoie in 1403. The latter passed it on to Ymbaud de Bletterans, whose family kept it until the middle of the 15th century. The monument then suffered the conflicts of the time: plundering of the Scotchers in 1437, partial destruction by the troops of Louis XI in 1471 during the fight against Charles the Temerary, and ravages of the Wars of Religion in 1562, where Protestants took over Macon and devastated the church of the castle.

In 1665, Jean-Baptiste Michon, king's adviser in Lyon, acquired the estate and undertook important works, marked by his badge affixed to the entrance gate. The Michon family, known for its authoritarianism, was attacked by the peasants during the Great Fear of 1789, where the castle was ransacked three times. Arrested as a suspect under the Terror, Jean-Baptiste Michon saw his property confiscated after his son's death in 1809. The castle then changed hands several times: acquired by the Chaland family in 1829, then by the silky Lyons Darnat in the 20th century, before being restored by the Pidault family from 1989.

Architecturally, the castle consists of a body of main houses flanked by square towers, including a head of a pavilion roof and scaffolds added in the 19th century. The ensemble includes a forecourt accessible by a gate adorned with the coat of arms of the Michon, a staircase with hanging screws, and the remains of a 12th century chapel, reduced to the bell tower and the choir. Ranked a historic monument in 1984 for its remarkable elements (donjon, Gardes room, fireplaces), it now houses a wine estate in organic farming, guest rooms, and reception areas.

The castle illustrates the medieval power struggles in Mâconnais, where the influences of the Counts of Mâcon, the abbeys of Cluny and Tournus, and large seigneurial families such as the Berze or the Rougemonts cross. Its history also reflects the upheavals of the Revolution, with the resistance of the peasants against seigneurial privileges, and the economic transformations of the nineteenth century, marked by Lyon's industrialisation. Integrated with the Route des châteaux in southern Burgundy, it today attracts visitors for its heritage and wine setting.

Future

The castle is a private property. It is open to the public.

External links