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Château de Coiselet à Matafelon-Granges dans l'Ain

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Maison forte
Ain

Château de Coiselet

    Hameau de Coiselet
    01580 Matafelon-Granges
Château de Coiselet
Château de Coiselet
Château de Coiselet
Château de Coiselet
Crédit photo : Zbh0170 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
1370
Feudal recognition
25 mai 1517
Sale to Forcrand
9 novembre 1518
Ratification of sale
4 novembre 1983
Partial protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs (Case B 139): inscription by order of 4 November 1983

Key figures

Pierre Aleman - Knight, ancestor of the lords Father of Guillaume and Jean Aleman.
Philiberte Aleman - Lady of Coiselet, last heiress Sell the seigneury in 1517.
Barthélemy et Philippes de Forcrand - Ecuyers, new lords Acquire Coiselet in 1517.
Claude de Chalant - Lord of Arbent and Mornay Ratify the sale in 1518.
Amand Goyet - Lord of Monthoux, creditor Have a commitment to Coiselet.

Origin and history

The Château de Coiselet is a former fortified house built in the 2nd quarter of the 14th century, located in the commune of Matafelon-Granges (Ain), on the banks of the river Ain. This monument, the centre of the seigneury of Coiselet, was originally owned by the Aleman family, vassal of the Sires of Thoire-Villars. In 1370 William and Jean Aleman, son of knight Pierre Aleman, recognized this fief as a tribute. The seigneury remained in their line until Philiberte Aleman, the last heiress, who passed it on by marriage and then by sale in 1517 to the brothers Barthélemy and Philippes de Forcrand, squire lords of Arromas.

The transaction of 1517 specifies that Coiselet is a firm house in justice, sold to repay a debt contracted to Amand Goyet, seigneur of Monthoux. The contract was ratified in 1518 by Claude de Chalant, son of Philiberte. The Forcrands kept the seigneury for several generations: in the seventeenth century, Claude and Antoine de Forcrand were the seigneurs, descendants of Philippes. The castle, partially protected since 1983 (façades and roofs inscribed in the Historical Monuments), bears witness to this feudal history and its transformations in the 15th, 16th and 19th centuries.

Architecturally, the site combines medieval defensive elements and later developments. Its strategic location, near the former border of Burgundy County, highlights its historic role of territorial control. The seigneury of Coiselet, described as pure and frank (without intermediate suzerainety), illustrates the legal autonomy of certain fiefs in the region. Today, the castle remains a marker of local heritage, linked to noble families such as the Aleman, Chalant and Forcrand.

External links