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Beaulon Castle à Saint-Dizant-du-Gua en Charente-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Charente-Maritime

Beaulon Castle

    25 Rue Saint Vincent 
    17240 Saint-Dizant-du-Gua
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Château de Beaulon
Crédit photo : Jack ma - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1502–1503
Creation of the seigneury of Beaulon
1591
Seizure
1712
Sale to Louis-Amable de Bigot
1740
Construction of the pigeon house
XVIIe siècle
Residence of the Bishops of Bordeaux
1987
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs; stairs; three oldest fireplaces located: on the ground floor, in the dining room and in the kitchen and upstairs in the bedroom at the eastern end of the castle; flight (cad. AT 288) : entry by order of 16 December 1987

Key figures

Pierre de Beaulon - Prosecutor at the Parliament of Bordeaux Acquire the seigneury in 1503 with his wife.
François-Théodore de Nesmond - President of the Paris Parliament Owner in the 17th century, father of a bishop.
François de Nesmond - Bishop of Bayeux Sell the seigneury in 1712.
Christian Thomas - Owner since 1965 Restores the castle and gets its ranking.

Origin and history

Beaulon Castle, located in Saint-Dizant-du-Gua in Charente-Maritime, is an emblematic building of the architectural transitions between the flamboyant Gothic and Renaissance. Built after 1503 – not in 1480 as a local legend suggests – it owes its name to the family of Beaulon, who acquired the seigneury in 1502 through a notarial act authorizing the building of a noble house, strong and defensible. This document also grants rights of justice, of parking, and the construction of a leak (seigneurial Pigeon), typical of feudal privileges of the time. Defensive elements (cranials, mâchicoulis) reflect the persistent tensions in Saintonge in the late Middle Ages, despite the absence of a drawbridge.

The architecture of the castle illustrates a juxtaposition of styles, characteristic of the period. The northern facade preserves a flamboyant gothic skylight (Louis XII style), decorated with hybrid motifs blending cabbages and Italianizing decorations, while a second glare, sleek and triangular, announces reborn classicism. The ramp-on-rail staircase, often attributed to an Italian influence, is in fact the result of an earlier local tradition. In the 17th century, under the Nesmond family – including François-Théodore, president of the Paris parliament – the castle became a summer residence for the bishops of Bordeaux. The seigneury, enriched by the right of high justice in 1635, was sold in 1712 to Louis-Amable de Bigot.

The estate spans the centuries with notable additions: a cylindrical dovecote of 1740 (1,500 bolts), monumental chimneys of the 17th–15th centuries, and landscaped developments in the 19th century. In 1965, Christian Thomas acquired the castle and began its restoration, obtaining his inscription in the Historical Monuments in 1987. The park, labeled Remarkable Garden, houses the Blue Fountains, artesian exemergences with turquoise reflections due to microscopic algae, surrounded by wild vegetation and local legends such as the Fountain of the Red Hand.

The blue fountains, 10 to 18 meters deep, feed the Beaulon Etier with water at 13°C constant. Their natural garden layout, populated by alders and dragonflies, contrasts with the French-style park and exotic (banana) plantations favored by the mild climate of Saintonge. The castle, still privately owned, has opened its doors to visitors since the 1980s, highlighting five centuries of architectural and wine history, in an area marked by the production of cognac and pineau.

The history of the castle is also marked by troubled episodes, such as the seizure of the land in 1591 for non-payment of rent to the Jesuits of Bordeaux, despite the intervention of Henry IV. In the 19th century, the estate passed into the hands of families such as the Brémond d'Ars or the Manes, before being preserved by Christian Thomas. Contemporary works have preserved rare elements, such as the rotating scale of the dovecote or the antiquitant busts of the staircase, testimonies of successive cultural influences – medieval, renaissant and classic – that shaped Beaulon.

External links