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Château de la Presle à Coulandon dans l'Allier

Allier

Château de la Presle

    40 Allée de la Presle
    03000 Coulandon

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVe siècle
First seigneurial mention
XVIIe siècle
Construction of the original castle
1887
Reconstruction of the castle
4 janvier 2021
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle of the Presle in its entirety, with its tapestries, paintings and marquetry panels embedded, as well as the two square pavilions, the two round towers, the communes and the park with its fences, appearing in the cadastre section AE, plots n° 5, 9, 11 to 18, 27 to 34: inscription by order of 4 January 2021

Key figures

Guillaume Lapelin - Bourbonnais account manager First known lord of the Presle (XV).
Pierre Louis Perron - Owner in the 18th century Sell the estate to the Veauce Cadier.
Jean-Marie Barthélémy de Las Cazes - Reconstruction coordinator Order of destruction and rebuild in 1887.
Jean-Bélisaire Moreau - Windmill architect Designed the new castle (1887).

Origin and history

The Château de la Presle came into being in the 15th century with the seigneury owned by Guillaume Lapelin, the Bourbonnais's master of accounts and secretary to the widow of Charles I of Bourbon. The Lapelin family retained the property until the 17th century, when it had the original castle built, accompanied by large commons. These buildings, characteristic of the seigneurial architecture of the period, mark the climax of their influence in the region.

In the 18th century, the estate changed hands and was acquired by Pierre Louis Perron, whose daughter married Simon Cadier, Baron de Veauce. This marriage seals a new era for the Presle, integrating the castle into a wider aristocratic network. The 19th century saw the property move to the Las Cases family, which undertook a radical transformation: in 1887, Jean-Marie Barthélémy de Las Cazes ordered the destruction of the old castle (except for the communes) and ordered the millenian architect Jean-Bélisaire Moreau to a completely new residence, reflecting the tastes of the era.

The current site, fully protected since 2021, includes the reconstructed castle, its pavilions, round towers, commons of origin and a park lined with fences. The remarkable interior elements, such as tapestries, paintings and marquetries, bear witness to the fascist of successive owners. The inscription in the title of the Historical Monuments enshrines the heritage value of this place, where the traces of four centuries of noble and bourgeois history overlap.

External links