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Gos Castle dans le Tarn

Tarn

Gos Castle

    41 impasse du château
    81320 Barre

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1800
1900
2000
Moyen Âge
Initial construction
1420
Sale of the domain
1814
Residence of Pierre de Beyne
1834
Gift to the Sisters of Saint Joseph
XVIIIe siècle
Renaissance renovation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Pierre de Galand - Former owner Sell the castle in 1420.
Jean de Beyne - Acquirer in 1420 New lord of the castle.
Michel de Beynes - Owner under the Revolution He lives there during the troubles.
Pierre de Beyne - Last Lord of Barre Offer the castle in 1834.
Abbé de Pins - Beneficiary of the grant Founded the convent in 1834.
Cardinal Fesch - Religious Initiator Mandate Father de Pins.

Origin and history

Gos Castle, located in Barre in the Tarn, finds its origins in the Middle Ages as a feudal home. With a body of fortified houses, round towers and a ditch, it was a typical defensive architecture. His freeholds were sold in 1420 by Pierre de Galand to Jean de Beyne, marking his passage into the hands of a local noble family.

In the 18th century, the castle underwent a major renovation, losing its medieval characteristics to adopt a bourgeois Renaissance style, with two emblematic square towers. During the Revolution, he served as a refuge for Michel de Beynes, allowing the local nobility to escape trouble. His son, Pierre de Beyne, the last lord of Barre, resided there from 1814 before ceding him in 1834.

In 1834, Pierre de Beyne offered the castle to the Abbé de Pins, led by Cardinal Fesch, to establish a convent of the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Lyon. The seigneurial salon was converted into a temporary chapel and a church dedicated to Saint Joseph was built as an annex. A bell was installed in one of the towers, sealing its religious vocation until today.

The castle thus illustrates a remarkable architectural and functional transition: from a medieval fortress to an aristocratic residence, then to a place of worship. Its history reflects the political and social upheavals of France, from feudalism to revolution, to its role in the expansion of a religious order in the 19th century.

External links