Historical Monument 11 septembre 2024 (≈ 2024)
Registration of remains by ministerial decree.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The vestiges of the old castle and the village of Arzeliers, according to the plan annexed to the decree, on plots 15 to 26 appearing in the cadastre section B, as well as on the non-cadastre communal road: inscription by decree of 11 September 2024
Origin and history
The ancient remains of the castle and the village of Arzeliers, located in the municipality of Laragne-Montéglin in the Hautes-Alpes, constitute a site classified as Historic Monument. The site includes the ruins of the castle as well as those of the medieval village, spread over several cadastral plots and a communal road. These remains, although partially preserved, illustrate the strategic and residential importance of this site at a time not specified in the available sources, but whose recent protection (2024) underscores the heritage value recognized by the authorities.
The classification by decree of 11 September 2024 specifically concerns parcels 15 to 26 of section B of the cadastre, as well as a non-cadastre communal road. This site is now owned by the municipality of Laragne-Montéglin, suggesting a local desire for preservation and enhancement. No information is available on its accessibility to the public, its possible tourist functions (visits, rentals, accommodation), or its detailed state of conservation. Current data are limited to its approximate location and legal status as a protected monument.
In the wider context of the Hautes-Alpes and the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region, fortified villages and their castles often played a central role in medieval social and economic organization. These structures served as shelters, administrative centres or points of control for communication lines. Although the specific history of Arzeliers is not documented here, this type of site generally reflects the local dynamics of power, agriculture and trade that structured the life of rural communities between the Middle Ages and the modern era.