Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château des Gouttes à Thionne dans l'Allier

Allier

Château des Gouttes

    3 Chemin de la Bergerie
    03220 Thionne

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVe siècle
Construction of the logis-donjon
1607
Marriage Claude Raquin - Jacques de Charry
Début XVIIe siècle
Home extension
1818
Purchased by Jean Marie Clayeux
Vers 1870
Restoration by René Moreau
19 mai 2003
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle in its entirety, including interior decorations, including: ground floor: vestibule, small living room, dining room, large ice lounge, small green living room, archive room, staircase; First floor: large bedroom with paintings, bishop's room, small bedroom, alchemist's room; as well as the commons ( stables, saddleries), the dovecote, the isolated tower, the 16th century stables, the orangery, the cartreuses; guard's pavilion, park with its hydraulic system, green living room and Eiffel bridge (cad. A 111, 112, 230, 231, 233-236, 285, 300, 302, 304, 337, 340, 341, 375, 378, 379): registration by order of 19 May 2003

Key figures

Philippe Raquin des Gouttes - Knight of Malta and Lieutenant-General Owner in the 16th century, heir Raquin.
Claude Raquin - Heir of the Gouttes Married Jacques de Charry in 1607.
Jacques de Charry - Lord of the Drops by covenant Founded the Charry des Gouttes line.
Jean Marie Clayeux - Acquirer in 1818 Local family owner until 20th.
René Clayeux - Catering sponsor Enlarge the castle around 1870.
René Moreau - Windmill architect Leads the neo-medieval work.

Origin and history

The château des Gouttes, located in Thionne in the Allier (Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes), consists of a 15th century house, a 19th century neo-Gothic wing, and commons organized around a quadrilateral court. Some of the moat remains, and the estate extends into an English park punctuated with ponds. Some interior decorations, especially in the main house, date from the seventeenth century, testifying to its architectural evolution throughout the centuries.

The seigneury was attested in the 14th century and then passed to the Raquin family in the 16th century, including Philippe Raquin des Gouttes, knight of Malta and lieutenant general of the naval armies. In 1607, Claude Raquin married Jacques de Charry, and their line retained the castle until 1802. Acquired in 1818 by Jean Marie Clayeux, the estate was restored and enlarged around 1870 by his grandson René Clayeux, with architect René Moreau, who incorporated the new constructions in a harmonious neo-medieval style.

Ranked a Historic Monument in 2003, the castle protects its architectural complex (logis, communes, pigeon-house, orangery) as well as its park, including a hydraulic system, a footbridge attributed to Eiffel and a green salon. Private property, it is not accessible to the public, thus preserving its internal and external heritage, a reflection of five centuries of Bourbon history.

Historical sources mention specialized works such as Les fiefs du Bourbonnais (1896) or Le château des Gouttes: a bourbonnaise pearl (2009), which document its role in the Besbre valley. The castle also illustrates the influence of local noble families, from Raquin to Clayeux, as well as the architectural transformations linked to the tastes of the 19th and 20th centuries.

External links