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Castle of Caunelles à Juvignac dans l'Hérault

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Hérault

Castle of Caunelles

    Chemin de Caunelles
    34990 Juvignac

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1263
First chapel
1595
Acquisition by Jean Hucher
1790
Sale of the domain
1823
Garden Redessin
2006
Historical monument classification
2014
Record flood
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The estate comprising the castle, its gardens and the park (within the enclosure wall, including this wall and its gates) with the corresponding structure (chapel, orangery, remnants of the greenhouse, noria and edicles) , the gardener's house with the pigeon tower and the vegetable garden, in whole, with the soil of the corresponding plots, as well as the plot of the planter above the park (box BO 1: park, 2: planter, 3: pigeon tree ; BP 1 : ruined shed, 2 : castle and garden, 8, 9 : pine forest, 37 : vegetable garden): inscription by decree of 20 April 2006

Key figures

Jean Hucher (~1546-1603) - Ordinary doctor of Henri IV Lord of the estate in 1595.
Pierre Ducher - First Consul of Montpellier Owner in 1647.
Henri Ducher - Counsellor in the Chamber of Accounts Owner in 1680.
Jean Duché - Second Advocate General Owner in 1714.
Xavier Duché (Duchi de Cannelles) - Attorney General Last heir, died in 1802.
Jean-Marie Amelin - Landscape Restore the park in 1823.

Origin and history

Caunelles Castle, located in the commune of Juvignac (Hérault), has its origins in the 16th century, although traces of a parish chapel called "Caunelis" date back to 1263. This place of worship, placed under the protection of Charles d'Aigrefeuille, evolved in 1484 under the name "Caunelas". The first cards of Cassini, in 1747, formalized the appellation Château de Caunelle (without the final S). In the Renaissance, the estate, including terraces on the Mosson and lands, is recognized as noble. Henry IV attributed in 1595 to John Hucher, the king's ordinary doctor and squire, who became his lord.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the property passed into the hands of the Ducher family (or Duché), marked by influential figures: Pierre Ducher, first consul of Montpellier in 1647, Henri Ducher, adviser to the Chamber of Accounts in 1680, and Jean Duché, attorney general in 1714. The estate was sold in 1790, and the lineage was extinguished in 1802 with Xavier Duché, Attorney General. The castle, transformed into Montpellierian madness in the 18th century, preserves Renaissance elements such as sled windows, while adopting classic features (low slope roof, symmetry of openings).

In 1823, the park and gardens (9 ha) were redesigned by Jean-Marie Amelin, integrating garrigue, pinewood and a damp cord along the Mosson. The estate, now dedicated to viticulture (AOC Languedoc), is suffering in 2014 from record floods (410 m3/s), causing major damage. Ranked historic monument in 2006, it includes castle, chapel, orangery, dovecote, and wall enclosure. Its protection perimeter, initially set at 500 metres, was revised in 2014 to include the Constellation ZAC.

External links