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Château du Touvet au Touvet dans l'Isère

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Isère

Château du Touvet

    Le Château
    38660 Le Touvet
Château du Touvet
Château du Touvet
Château du Touvet
Château du Touvet
Château du Touvet
Château du Touvet
Château du Touvet
Château du Touvet
Crédit photo : Patrice78500 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIIe siècle
Initial construction
1528
Acquisition by Guigues Guiffrey
milieu XVIIIe siècle (1753-1762)
Transformation into a marina
1759
Creating the water staircase
17 mars 1959
Classification of water stairs
16 novembre 1964
Classification of castle and park
1997-1999
Restoration of gardens
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Water stairs (Box B 568, 578) : classification by decree of 17 March 1959; The whole castle itself, including Cordoba leather decoration of one of the rooms; the remains of the old fortifications; the park (cf. B 579, 565 to 569, 577, 578, 580): Order of 16 November 1964

Key figures

Famille d'Entremont - Founders of the castle Builders of the strong house in the 13th century.
Guigues Guiffrey - Owner in 1528 Archer of Bayard, ancestor of the current lineage.
Comte Pierre de Marcieu - 18th century transformer Author of gardens and water stairs.
Sieur Potin - Master of the gardens Designer of the Italian water staircase.
Bruno et Isabelle Pourroy de Lauberivière de Quinsonas-Oudinot - Current owners Descendants of Marshal Oudinot, managers of the estate.

Origin and history

The Château du Touvet, built in the 13th century by the Entremont family, was originally a strong house controlling the Gresivaudan valley, on the border between Dauphiné and Savoie. Today, there is only one body of medieval houses, formerly called the castle of Qinsonnas, bearing witness to its defensive past. Guigues Guiffrey, archer in the Chevalier Bayard's company, became its owner in 1528, marking the beginning of an uninterrupted hereditary transmission for more than 500 years.

In the 18th century, Count Pierre de Marcieu radically transformed the castle into a marina, adding a water staircase to the Italian, French terraces and sumptuous interior decorations, including a room decorated with Cordoba leather. The gardens, designed by Letellier and Potin, combine Italian influences and French classicism, with boxwood beds, basins and water games fed by the Bresson torrent. Ranked Remarkable Gardens, they were restored between 1997 and 1999 according to 18th century plans.

The castle, still privately owned by the Purroy family of Laubarivière de Quinsonas-Oudinot (descendant of Marshal Oudinot), is open to the public. Ranked Historic Monument in 1959 for its water stairs and in 1964 for the whole estate, it illustrates the architectural evolution of a medieval fortress in aristocratic residence, while preserving remains of its original fortifications.

Its strategic location, between Grenoble and Chambéry, made it a place of power at the borders of Dauphiné and Savoie. The archives of the castle reveal the extent of the work carried out between 1753 and 1762, including the creation of eight basins originally planned but never carried out before the contemporary restoration. The two plane trees surrounding the water staircase, planted in the 19th century, bear witness to landscape changes inspired by romanticism.

Today, the estate combines historical heritage and an exceptional natural setting, with a view of the mountains of Grésivaudan. The interior decoration, the military remains and the 10-hectare park, which combines classical heritage and subsequent adaptations, make it a rare example of family and architectural continuity over more than half a millennium.

External links