Initial construction vers 1525-1530 (≈ 1528)
Sharing the property of Gimel's family.
début XVIIe siècle
Expansion and stables
Expansion and stables début XVIIe siècle (≈ 1704)
Addition of spans and construction of stables.
1708
Change of ownership
Change of ownership 1708 (≈ 1708)
Transfer to Camon's hands.
1808
Current family transmission
Current family transmission 1808 (≈ 1808)
Acquisition by the current owner family.
2 avril 1996
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 2 avril 1996 (≈ 1996)
Protection of dependency and home.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Dependencies; floor of the courtyard, including gate; house, with its towers and pavilions (cad. B 25, 44, 45): registration by order of 2 April 1996
Key figures
Famille de Gimel - Initial sponsors
Builders of the castle around 1525-1530.
Famille Camon - Owners in the 18th century
Notable sarladais buyers in 1708.
Origin and history
The Saulou Castle was built in the early 16th century by a branch of the Gimel family, originally from Carlux. This monument, located in Cazoulès, Dordogne, reflects the desire of this line to settle in the region after a division of family property around 1525-1530. The original house, rectangular in shape, was reinforced by two round towers and a scauguette, characteristic of the defensive houses of the time.
In the 17th century, the house underwent significant expansions, including the addition of two bays to the west and a quadrangular pavilion to the northwest. The stables, built facing the south side at the beginning of the same century, complete the whole. The interiors retain remarkable decorative elements, such as 18th-century panelling and woodwork, as well as 17th-century chimneys, one of which has a painting depicting the stoning of Saint-Étienne.
In 1708 the castle passed into the hands of the Camon, a notable family of Sarlat, before being handed over in 1808 to its present owners. Ranked Historic Monument in 1996, the estate includes the house, its outbuildings, and the ground of the courtyard with its portal. These successive transformations illustrate the architectural and social evolution of a seigneurial residence in Périgord, from the 16th to the 18th century.
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