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Commandery of L'Ormeteau à Reuilly dans l'Indre

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Commanderie templière
Château
Indre

Commandery of L'Ormeteau

    L'Ormeteau
    36260 Reuilly
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Commanderie de LOrmeteau
Crédit photo : Kelesil - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1136
Templar Foundation
1312
Transition to Hospitallers
1429
English occupation
1457
Authorized reconstruction
1589
Pillows by the Leagues
1790
Departure of last Commander
1793
Sale as a national good
12 octobre 1972
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts and roofs of the castle; Isolated tower (cad. E 32, 38): entry by order of 12 October 1972

Key figures

Jean de Marcenac - Hospital Commander Reconstructed in 1457 with the permission of Charles VII.
Savary de Lancosme - Last Commander Left the Ormeteau in 1790 before the Revolution.
Charles VII - King of France Authorized reconstruction in 1457.
Dominique et Pascale de La Rochefoucauld-Montbel - Current owners Hospitallers, owners since the 20th century.

Origin and history

The Commanderie of L'Ormeteau was founded in 1136 by the Order of the Temple under the name Domus Templi by Ulmo Tyaudi. Thanks to donations from local lords (1157–IIIth century) and an episcopal privilege of Bourges, it developed rapidly. After the dissolution of the Templars in 1312, she passed to the Hospitallers of Saint John of Jerusalem, becoming La Commanderie-Saint-Jean-de-l'Ormeteau. The destruction of the Hundred Years' War (English occupation in 1429) required its reconstruction, authorized by Charles VII in 1457 under Commander Jean de Marcenac.

In the 15th century, the Hospitallers expanded the site, adding fortifications and Renaissance windows. The chapel, looted by the Leagues in 1589, was destroyed after the Revolution (sale as national property in 1793). The last commander, Savary de Lancosme, left in 1790. The current buildings form a quadrilateral flanked by four towers with pepper roofs, with a spiral staircase in a square tower. A prison was set up in the 17th century in one of the towers.

The estate also included a lime oven, two tiles, and a dovecote rebuilt in the 19th century. The facades and roofs of the castle, as well as an isolated tower, were classified as historical monuments in 1972. Today, we still distinguish the foundations of the chapel and the remains of the fortified enclosure. The shields of the kings of France, Saint John of Jerusalem and Marcenac always adorn the main gate.

Private property since the 20th century, the commandory now belongs to Dominique (former grand hospitaller of the Order of Malta) and Pascale de La Rochefoucauld-Montbel. Its architecture combines Templar heritage, hospital transformations and traces of the conflicts that marked its history, from the Middle Ages to the Revolution.

External links