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Château de Girecourt à Girecourt-sur-Durbion dans les Vosges

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Vosges

Château de Girecourt

    2 Allée du Château 
    88600 Girecourt-sur-Durbion
Château de Girecourt
Château de Girecourt
Château de Girecourt
Château de Girecourt
Château de Girecourt
Château de Girecourt
Crédit photo : Raphdvoj - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1540
Initial construction
1639
Swedish headquarters
1705
Acquisition by Humbert
1782
Column of Crillon
1994
Historical Monument
2012
Catering price
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The whole estate, with the exception of the early 20th century wing duplicating the north-west wing of the castle (Box B 83-86, 254, 255, 71, 80-82, 73): inscription by order of 13 February 1997

Key figures

Pierre de Haraucourt - Lord and builder Founder of the castle around 1540.
Pierre de La Porte - Resident during the war Owner besieged in 1639.
Henri de La Tour d'Auvergne (Turenne) - Legendary general Stayed near the ordeal.
Jean-François Humbert - Baron then Count of Girecourt Acquirer in 1705, moderniser of the estate.
Marguerite-Suzanne Humbert - Inheritance Send the castle to the Bourcier de Villers.
Thierry Courtalon - Owner restaurant Directs the work since 1994.

Origin and history

Girecourt-sur-Durbion Castle, built around 1540 by Pierre de Haraucourt, member of the Grands Chevaux de Lorraine, is a fortified seigneurial residence typical of the sixteenth century. Its initial structure, described in 1755, consists of four walls flanked by towering towers, a water ditch and a missing enclosure. During the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), he housed Pierre de La Porte and his wife, whose children were baptized in the castral chapel. In 1639, the castle underwent a Swedish siege, and the legend reports that Turenne had stayed near the Calvary.

Acquired in 1705 by Jean-François Humbert, a lawyer in the service of Duke Léopold, the estate then passed to the Counts of Bourcier de Villers by marriage in 1737. In 1782 they erected a column commemorating the capture of Minorca by the Duke of Crillon (destroyed at the Revolution). In the 19th century, the park was built and the castle transformed. Sold in 1922 to Dr Lefèvre, the property has been restored since 1994 by the Courtalon family, revealing Renaissance caisson ceilings and remarkable architectural elements.

Ranked a Historic Monument in 1994 (extended in 1997), the castle was distinguished in 2012 by a prize of 10 000 € from the association Vieilles Maisons Françaises for the quality of its restoration. The works preserved original elements such as an ogival window of the chapel and 16th century ceilings, considered among the most beautiful of Lorraine. The estate, including a park with the ruins of the Crillon column, remains a major testimony of Lorrain history.

External links