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Château de Charentonneau à Maisons-Alfort dans le Val-de-Marne

Val-de-Marne

Château de Charentonneau


    94700 Maisons-Alfort
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Château de Charentonneau
Crédit photo : Thesupermat - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1170-1180
First mention of the field
1281
Domaine de l'Abbey de Saint-Maur
1377
Acquisition by Charles V
1671
Repurchase by René Gaillard
1793
Sale as a national good
1808
Acquisition by Baron Rodier-Salièges
1929
Classification of orangery
années 1950
Demolition of the castle
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Remnants of orangery: inscription by decree of 10 April 1929

Key figures

Charles V - King of France Acheta a house in Charentonneau in 1377
René Gaillard - Lord of Charentonneau Acquieta the estate in 1671
Jean Mathieu Philibert Sérurier - Marshal of Empire Owner under the First Empire
Baron Rodier-Salièges - Senator and Owner Acquire the estate in 1808
Albert Flamen - Flemish painter Represented the castle in 1646

Origin and history

The Château de Charentonneau, also known as Château Gaillard, was a seigneurial residence built between the 17th and 18th centuries on the domain of Charentonneau, in Maisons-Alfort (Val-de-Marne). Mentioned in 1170 as Carentoniolo, this medieval fief originally belonged to the Abbey of Saint Maur. Over the centuries, he passed into the hands of notables such as Nicolas Duru (1444), the Alligret families (XVI century) and Gaillard (from 1671), who gave him his alternative name. The estate, rebuilt at the end of the 18th century, became a private property under the Empire, successively owned by Marshal Serurier and Baron Rodier-Salièges.

In the 19th century, the castle and its 250-hectare park were fragmented and partly lotted, notably by the Pastré and Delalain families. In 1929, the remains of the orangery – two arched walls in the middle of the wall decorated with mascarons – were included in the additional inventory of historical monuments. Despite this protection, the castle was demolished in the 1950s to give way to a plot of 704 dwellings, the Residence of Château Gaillard. Today, only the orangery walls, visible in the private park, bear witness to this missing heritage.

The architecture of the castle, described as "scenic" in the 18th century, combined a body of brick and stone houses, a gallery decorated with mythological statues (Apollon, Flora), and an orangery with glass arches. The estate also included an 18th century watermill, destroyed after a fire in 1883, as well as a farm and outbuildings surrounded by ditches. The old plans reveal a landscaped park with islands on the Marne, now integrated into the modern district of Charentonneau.

The toponym Charentonneau originated in a medieval charter of 1170-1180, evoking an estate linked to the Abbey of Saint-Maur. In the Middle Ages, the fief housed a manor house, a common mill and agricultural land, often disputed between local and religious lords. The seigneury, endowed with high justice in the eighteenth century, was a place of power until the Revolution, where the castle, confiscated as demigrated property, was sold. Its decline accelerated with the urbanization of the 20th century, erasing almost any trace of this former aristocratic residence.

The last cinematic traces of the castle appear in Archimède le clochard (1959), where Jean Gabin shot scenes among the ruins, surrounded by the new bars of buildings. This contrast between heritage and modernity illustrates the radical transformation of the site, now shared between private condominiums and public spaces. Ancient archives and engravings, such as that of Albert Flamen (1646), remain the main testimonies of his past fascist.

External links