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Château de Grand-Fougeray en Ille-et-Vilaine

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Ille-et-Vilaine

Château de Grand-Fougeray

    La Ferme du Château
    35390 Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Château de Grand-Fougeray
Crédit photo : Pymouss44 - 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
1189
Construction begins
1235-1425
Period of the Rieux family
1354
Caught by Du Guesclin
XVIIe siècle (vers 1643-1715)
Shaking of the upper parts
1748
Purchase by Locquet de Grandville
20 janvier 1913
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Donjon du château (cad. Q 31): classification by decree of 20 January 1913

Key figures

Bertrand Du Guesclin - Military Chief Breton Pristed the castle in 1354 by a trick
Olivier II Tournemine - Lord and presumed sponsor Ordonna the construction in 1189
Jean II de Rieux - Lord of Rieux Owner died in 1417, family possessor until 1425
Charles Jean Locquet de Grandville - Malouin merchant and shipowner Acheta and partially dismantled the castle in 1748

Origin and history

The Château de Grand-Fougeray, located in the eponymous commune in Brittany, finds its origins in the 12th century with a construction initiated in 1189, probably on the order of Olivier II Tournemine or John II de Rieux. This castle, originally equipped with nine towers, today retains only its 13th century dungeon, nicknamed Tour Duguesclin, as well as the remains of its enclosure. The Le Beuf family, lord of the place since the 11th century, was the owner of it until 1235, when by covenant it passed to the family of Rieux, which kept it until 1424.

In 1354, Bertrand Du Guesclin took over the castle by a daring trick: disguised as loggers, he and his men penetrated the fortress by hiding their weapons in wooden fagots worn by peasant accomplices. Previously occupied by the English until 1350, the castle became a symbol of the Breton reconquest. In the 15th century, openings were pierced in the dungeon, while its high parts were probably abrased later, under Louis XIV.

In the 18th century, the castle was acquired by Charles Jean Locquet de Grandville, a Malouin merchant, who used his stones to build a new Renaissance castle nearby and houses in the village. The dungeon, the only remaining medieval vestige, was classified as a Historic Monument in 1913. It was 34 metres high and 13 metres in diameter, and once housed a dovecote on its top floor, now partially extinct.

The family of Rieux, owner of the premises from 1235 to 1425, deeply marked the history of the castle, while the dismantlings of the eighteenth century erased much of its original enclosure. Today, the dungeon bears witness to medieval defensive architecture and struggles for the control of Brittany between French and English.

External links