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Château de Blagny-sur-Vingeanne en Côte-d'or

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Côte-dor

Château de Blagny-sur-Vingeanne

    Le Bourg
    21310 Blagny-sur-Vingeanne
Château de Blagny-sur-Vingeanne
Château de Blagny-sur-Vingeanne
Château de Blagny-sur-Vingeanne
Château de Blagny-sur-Vingeanne
Crédit photo : Prosopee - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1607
Property of Saulx family
1618-1648
Destruction during the war
avant 1782
Reconstruction of the castle
début des années 1900
Park Amputation
28 juillet 1988
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle; facades and roofs of the communes; grids A 514): registration by order of 28 July 1988

Key figures

Famille de Saulx - Owner in 1607 Detainer before destruction
Matthias Gallas - Head of mercenaries Responsible for the destruction in 1618-1648

Origin and history

The castle of Blagny-sur-Vingeanne, located in Côte-d'Or in the Burgundy-Franche-Comté region, is an 18th century building built on the remains of an ancient castle destroyed during the Thirty Years War (1618-1648). Originally it was an outbuilding of the Abbey of Bèze and belonged to the Saulx family in 1607. The mercenaries of Matthias Gallas, ravaging the region, razed the village and the original castle, requiring a complete reconstruction before 1782, as evidenced by a land plan preserved in the departmental archives.

The present castle, registered as historical monuments since 1988, consists of a three-span central house, framed by commons and opened on a rectangular courtyard by a wrought iron gate. Its architecture combines a ground floor and a high floor, with facades decorated with false bosses. The park, partially amputated in the early 1900s during the construction of the canal between Champagne and Burgundy (then called canal de la Marne à la Saône), also housed a square dovecote and a well with round margin, elements characteristic of seigneurial estates.

The archives show that the site was strategically placed on the southeast edge of the village, close to the canal, highlighting its role both residential and economic. The gates, the roofs of the communes and the castle itself have been subject to heritage protection since the 1988 decree. Although the sources do not specify its current use, its inscription and configuration suggest a vocation both noble and agricultural, typical of the post-war reconstructions of Thirty Years in Burgundy.

External links