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Puy-Launay Castle dans le Lot

Lot

Puy-Launay Castle

    183 Route de Puy Launay
    46270 Linac

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1279
First written entry
1504
Seigneurial count
XVe siècle (seconde moitié)
Construction of the current castle
1607
Estate agreement
1786
Sale to Étienne de Palhasse
1812
Judicial sale
30 mai 1989
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Rigal Guignabert - Lord of the fief Owner cited in 1279
Marie Rabassier - Inheritance Bring the lordship to the Narbonnes in 1438
Eustache de Narbonnès - Lord Builder Receives the fief in 1438
Eustache II de Narbonnès - Counting Lord Owner in 1504, son of the previous
Jean de Narbonnès - Last direct heir Murder without descending in 1602
Balthasard de Cadrieu - New Lord Heir after agreement of 1607
Guillaume de Dumas - Acquirer in 1658 President of the Figeac Election
Étienne de Palhasse de Salgues - Pre-revolutionary owner Buyer in 1786, resident until 1803

Origin and history

The castle of Puy-Launay, located in Linac in the Lot, is mentioned from the thirteenth century under the name "Puech Léones". It then belonged to the land of the abbey of Aurillac. A seigneurial tower of the 12th or 13th century, called tor de Puechlaunes, was already present, associated with a house body. This first building belonged to the Guignabert family, notably Rigal Guignabert cited in 1279.

In the 15th century, the fief passed into the hands of the Rabassier family, then to Eustache de Narbonnes by the marriage of Marie Rabassier in 1438. The Narbonnes built the present castle in the second half of the 15th century, integrating the foundations of the primitive dungeon. In 1504, the site is called "Puech Launes" and belongs to Eustache II of Narbonnes. The estate, protected by a enclosure with five towers in the 16th century, sees two of them transformed into a dovecote and chapel in the 17th century.

The property changed hands several times: sold in 1658 to Guillaume de Dumas, it then passed to the Bournazel families, Buisson, and then Durfort-Boissières. In 1786 Alphonse-Armand de Durfort-Boissières gave it to Étienne de Palhasse de Salgues. After successive sales in the 19th century, including a court auction in 1812, the castle was acquired by Antoine Chassari, who divided the estate. Since 1834, it belongs to the descendants of Pierre Bel, with a park reduced to 2 hectares.

The castle preserves traces of its medieval past, such as the foundations of the primitive dungeon, and architectural modifications of the 15th and 16th centuries. The two round rounds of the Revolution are a testament to its evolution. Ranked a historic monument in 1989, it embodies the feudal and seigneurial history of Quercy.

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