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Avully Castle à Brenthonne en Haute-Savoie

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Maison forte
Haute-Savoie

Avully Castle

    Chemin Rural du Chef-Lieu à la D35
    74890 Brenthonne
Private property
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Château dAvully
Crédit photo : TarichaRivularis - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
Vers 1310
First mention of Avully
1323
Aveu aux Counts de Savoie
1441
Transaction with Louis I
1499
Sale in Boniface de Saint-Michel
1536
Protestant Conversion
1596
Abjuration of Antoine de Saint-Michel
1946
Site classification picturesque
1971–1974
Restoration by the Guyon
1974
Registration historical monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château d'Avully (ruines) (Box B 504) : inscription by order of 3 May 1974

Key figures

Jacquemette de Boëge - Lady of Avully (15th century) Gives up and then redeems the seigneury.
Boniface de Saint-Michel - Owner Geneva (from 1499) Renovate the castle in the 16th.
Antoine de Saint-Michel - Baron d'Avully (16th century) Abjure Protestantism in 1596.
Jean et Yvonne Guyon - Restaurateurs (XX century) Save the castle of 1971.

Origin and history

The castle of Avully is an ancient fortified house built in the 14th century, the capital of the seigneury of Avully in the municipality of Brenthonne (Haute-Savoie). Built on the remains of a Roman villa attested by fragments of tiles and ceramics, it controlled a strategic passage between Mount Boisy and the Voirons, in Chablais. Its moats have delivered stove tiles from the early Middle Ages, similar to those found in French-speaking Switzerland.

Around 1310, the family of Avully, vassale des Faucigny, was mentioned. In 1323 she admitted the strong house to the Counts of Savoy, then in 1336 to the Dolphins of Vienna, specifying her income of 10 pounds. In the 15th century, the seigneury passed through marriage to the family of Boëge. Jacquemette de Boëge gave her in 1441 to Duke Louis I of Savoy, who immediately sold her to him. Sold in 1499 to Boniface de Saint-Michel, a Geneva bourgeois, the house was profoundly renovated in the 16th century.

In 1536, the Saint Michaels adopted Protestantism during the Bernese invasion. Antoine de Saint-Michel, Baron d'Avully, solemnly abjured in 1596 in Turin, marking the return of Chablais to Catholicism. In the 18th century, the Sales family acquired the castle, abandoned in 1896 and restored from 1971 by Jean and Yvonne Guyon. Ranked a picturesque site in 1946 and a historic monument in 1974, it is now open to the public.

Architecturally, Avully combines medieval defensive elements (quadrangular enclosure, spur towers, mâchicoulis) and Renaissance arrangements (loggias, 16th century staircase). The chapel, the halls decorated with Savoyard coats of arms, and the Italian gardens bear witness to its evolution. The excavations revealed Roman and medieval artifacts, confirming its continued occupation since ancient times.

External links