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Sauveterre Castle dans le Tarn

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Tarn

Sauveterre Castle

    360 Sauveterre
    81240 Sauveterre
Crédit photo : Patoleon - 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
1214
Battle of Bouvines
Début XIIIe siècle
Destruction of the first castle
XIIIe siècle
Castrum fire
1407
Devasation by the Hundred Years' War
1452
Repurchase by the Auxilhon
1588 et 1622
Attacks during the Wars of Religion
fin XVe - début XVIe siècle
Renaissance reconstruction
1629
Castle ruined
XVIe siècle
Construction of the current castle
1667
Restoration by Jean-Jacques d-Auxilhon
1793
Revolutionary Confiscation
1789-1799
Pillows during the Revolution
1818-1825
Major restoration
31 juillet 2002
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle and the floors of the old castrum that carry it, in full (cf. A 694): registration by order of 31 July 2002

Key figures

Barthélémy d’Auxilhon - Lord of Sauveterre (died 1520) Reconstructs the castle late 15th.
Jacques d’Auxilhon - Catholic Lord in the 17th century Chassed by the Huguenots in 1622.
Jean-Jacques d’Auxilhon - Lord Restaurator (17th century) Put the castle back up in 1667.
Jean Étienne d’Auxilhon - Last Direct Auxilhon (late 18th) Property confiscated in 1793.
Maximilien de Gayraud de Lasserre - Heir adopted (1764-1835) Launches the 1818 works.
Marie Pauline de Pins - Wife of Maximilian (marriage in 1818) Participates in the restoration.
Bernard Charles - 19th century architect Leads post-Revolution restoration.
Simon de Montfort - Head of the Albigois Crusade Allied with an ancestor of the Auxilhon.
Chevalier Auxilhon (anonyme) - Founder of the local lineage Awarded after Bouvines in 1214.

Origin and history

Sauveterre Castle, located in the Tarn in Occitanie, is a fortified building dating back to a castrum burned in the 13th century during the Albige Crusade. Reconstructed in the 16th century by the Auxilhon family, originally from Picardie, it replaced a ruined castle acquired in 1452, devastated by the Hundred Years War and the plague. The Auxilhon, rewarded for their military engagement (especially at Bouvines in 1214), transformed the site into a Renaissance home flanked by round towers.

In the 19th century, the castle underwent extensive restorations led by architect Bernard Charles between 1818 and 1825, after the damage caused by the Wars of Religion and the Revolution. Confiscated during the latter, it is returned to its owners under the Restoration. The 19th century works add a neoclassical staircase, trompe-l'oeil paintings, and reshape the facades. The castle chapel, backed by the house, becomes the parish church of Sainte-Croix, sheltering the family burials.

The site, which was listed as historical monuments in 2002, retains defensive elements such as cannons and a crenellated cornice. The Auxilhon family, still owner after five centuries, left architectural traces mixing Middle Ages (tours, ditches), Renaissance (rectangular logis), and neoclassicism (inner spaces). The archives evoke attacks during the Wars of Religion (1588, 1622) and partial reconstruction in the 17th century after looting.

The spatial organization of the castle includes a main house of 40 meters, a courtyard of 110 meters long, and outbuildings in ruins ( stables). The dovecote, located in the courtyard, and the dovecote (old medieval tower) recall its seigneurial role. Inside, the 19th-century living rooms, the kitchen with its monumental fireplace, and the triangular service staircase illustrate the successive adaptations of the building.

The Auxilhon, lords of Sauveterre since 1452, mark the local history: Jean-Jacques d'Auxilhon restored the castle in the seventeenth century, while Maximilien de Gayraud de Lasserre (adopted in 1810) launched the 19th century works with his wife Marie Pauline de Pins. Their coat of arms, spread apart with gold wheels and dove, still adorns the site. The castle, open on a loop of the Thoré, dominates the village about twenty meters, highlighting its strategic and symbolic role.

External links