Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château de Monségou dans le Tarn

Tarn

Château de Monségou


    81260 Lamontélarié
Phototypie Labouche

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1437
Concession of forges
25 mars 1628
Imprisonment of Maroule
XVIe siècle
Wars of Religion
1751
Marriage of Marie de Monségou
27 octobre 1761
Reconstruction of forges
8 février 1766
Birth of Jean-Gaston de Pins
1860
Closing of forges
1876
Crude and destruction
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Famille d'Huc de Monségou - Initial owner Lords of the castle from the 15th.
Mr Maroule - Protestant lawyer Imprisoned in 1628 at the castle.
Marie de Monségou - Inheritance Married Paul de Pins in 1751.
Paul de Pins - New owner Powerful 18th century family.
Jean-Gaston de Pins - Catholic Bishop Born in the castle in 1766.
Jean-Jacques Vieu - Last forge master Active before closing in 1860.

Origin and history

The castle of Monségou, also called Château de Montségou, was built in the 15th century on the banks of the Agout, in Lamontélarié, in the Tarn. He originally belonged to the family of Séguy, then quickly to the family of Huc de Monségou. The estate was prosperous thanks to its iron resources, exploited since Gallo-Roman times, and its forges, attested from 1437 but destroyed during the Wars of Religion.

In the 16th century, the castle was a strategic place, especially during the Huguenot rebellions of the early 17th century. In 1628, a Protestant lawyer from Béziers, Mr.Maroule, was imprisoned there after his arrest. The forges, rebuilt in 1761, closed permanently in 1860, and were shaved during a flood in 1876.

The castle passed into the family of Pins in the 18th century after the marriage of Marie de Monségou with Paul de Pins. Jean-Gaston de Pins, the future Catholic bishop, was probably born there in 1766. The architecture of the castle, sober and disciplined, includes a rectangular dungeon and a turret, with only notable ornamentation the coat of arms of the Huc de Monségou family.

The family of Huc de Monségou, native of Languedoc, died in 1899 with Philippe d'Huc, but his name remained in the Delcassé family. The castle is also mentioned in literature, notably in Jacques Studer's Le cardinal de Monségou.

External links