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Tornac Castle dans le Gard

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Gard

Tornac Castle

    Mas Neuf
    30140 Tornac
Château de Tornac
Château de Tornac
Château de Tornac
Château de Tornac
Château de Tornac
Château de Tornac
Château de Tornac
Crédit photo : Liliane DELATTRE - 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
XIe-XIIe siècles
Construction of dungeon
1540
Transfer of Royal Rights
1549-1566
Construction of Renaissance Castle
1792
Fire and abandonment
5 décembre 1984
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle (ruines) (Box AP 113 to 116): entry by order of 5 December 1984

Key figures

Bermond de la Jonquière - Bourgeois d'Anduze and Lord of Tornac Acquita the tower in 1540, built the castle.

Origin and history

The castle of Tornac, located in the Gard department, is distinguished by its typical square dungeon of the lower Languedoc of the 11th and 12th centuries. From a parallelogram plane and pierced by rare openings, this tower was probably built on a site already occupied in Roman times. Originally intended for the watch and transmission of signals, it was named after Sandeiren or Sandeyren, altered in Saint-Deyran in the 15th and 16th centuries before adopting that of the village of Tornac at the end of the 17th century. The land was then adorned between the king of France and the prior of the Monastier, a division dating back to the Albigeian wars.

In 1540, royal rights over Tornac were transferred to Bermond de la Jonquière, a bourgeois of Anduze. The latter acquired the Sandeiran tower between 1549 and 1566 to build a castle, organizing the new structures around the medieval dungeon. The tower, erected on a cut rock, keeps a vaulted door in an elevated cradle of one metre. The site, however, was burned in 1792 during the Revolution, then abandoned and sold as a pieced national property. The ruins, now privately owned, were listed as historical monuments on December 5, 1984.

The architecture of the castle reflects its successive phases: the Romanesque dungeon, austere and functional, contrasts with the Renaissance additions commissioned by Bermond de la Jonquière. The carved rock base and the isolation of the site underline its defensive and strategic role, while its turbulent history — from medieval trimming to revolutionary destruction — illustrates the political upheavals of Languedoc. The current remains, though fragmentary, bear witness to this dual identity, between medieval fortress and seigneurial residence of the Renaissance.

External links