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Château de Montjean en Mayenne

Mayenne

Château de Montjean


    53320 Montjean

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
1215
First entry
avant 1385
Partial fire
1431
Deemed invincible fortress
1448-1474
Reconstruction by André de Lohéac
16 octobre 1591
Murder of Jean de Criqueboeuf
1779
Ruin consumed
15 août 1818
Sale to Morin de la Blottais
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

André de Lohéac - Marshal of France Reconstructs the castle (1466-1474)
Jean de Criquebœuf - Royalist Captain Killed in 1591 by Pierre Le Cornu
Pierre Le Cornu - Governor League of Craon Author of the murder of Criqueboeuf
Guy XV de Laval - Count of Laval Stays at the castle in 1489
Catherine d’Alençon - Widow of Guy XV Murder in Montjean in 1505
Henri de La Trémoïlle - Protestant Lord Restore Sainte-Anne Chapel (XVIIe)

Origin and history

Montjean Castle, located near a pond 2.5 km east of the town of Montjean (Mayenne), was in the 16th century a stronghold defending Laval County against leaguers. Reconstructed by André de Lohéac after 1450, it was a strategic issue during the Hundred Years Wars and religious conflicts.

Originally, the site was mentioned in 1215 as a castral motte (apud motam Montis Joannis), belonging to the Laval mobility. A fire partially ravaged the masonry castle before 1385, then the fortress, called a fortissimus locus in 1431, resisted the assaults during the Hundred Years War. The Duke of Alençon even detained an English prisoner in March 1431, proof of his reputation for invincibility.

André de Lohéac, Marshal of France, acquired Montjean in 1448 and rebuilt it between 1466 and 1474, making it a much more powerful place. The castle became a place of residence for the lords of Laval, such as Guy XV or Claude de Foix, and a prison for robbers around 1500. Catherine of Alençon, widow of Guy XV, died there in 1505, stressing her status as a noble residence.

During the Wars of Religion, Montjean was a royalist bastion against the leaguers. In October 1591 Jean de Criqueboeuf, captain loyal to Henry IV, was assassinated there by Pierre Le Cornu, a leaguer, during a tragedy linked to personal revenge. The fortress, which was occupied in turn by the two camps, fell into ruins after 1600, its stones reused as a quarry in the 18th century.

At the beginning of the 20th century, Abbé Angot described imposing ruins: a half-hectare enclosure flanked by towers, double ditches on the pond side, and rubble on the land side, exploited as a quarry. The chapel of Sainte-Anne, outside the enclosure, was restored by Henri de La Tremoille in the 17th century before being united to the chapter of Thouars. The estate, including mill and pond, remains valued despite the castle's ruin.

From the 13th century, the lords of Montjean succeeded each other, from families such as the Le Franc, the Couesmes, or the Landivy, until it was bought by M. Morin de la Blottais in 1818. The archives mention feudal confessions, conflicts of succession, and matrimonial alliances that bind Montjean to Laval County, then to the house of La Tremoille.

External links