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Château de Villebon dans l'Eure-et-Loir

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château Médiéval et Renaissance
Eure-et-Loir

Château de Villebon

    Le Château 
    28190 Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Château de Villebon
Crédit photo : cyrilb1881 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
fin XIVe siècle
Initial construction
1607
Acquisition by Sully
1641
Death of Sully
1812
Purchase by Pontoi-Pontcarré
1862
First ranking (Cancelled)
1927
Historical Monument
1981
Registration of the dovecote
1994
Open to the public
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Internal and external facades; roofs; stairs; gallery decorated with murals; Oratory of the Tower of Rosny; chapel; well: classification by order of 5 March 1927; Colombia (Doc

Key figures

Jeannet d'Estouteville - Founder Builder of the castle late XIVe.
Maximilien de Béthune, duc de Sully - Signature owner There lived 24 years, died in 1641.
Théophile de Pontoi-Pontcarré - Restaurant and mayor Son of the Marquis, deputy of Eure-et-Loir.
Prosper Mérimée - Inspector of Monuments Support for classification in 1853.
Marcel Proust - Writer Inspiration for *Warmantes*.
Jean de La Raudière - Current Owner Open the castle to the visitors.

Origin and history

Villebon Castle is a fortress built at the end of the 14th century by Jeannet d'Estouteville, surrounded by moat and equipped with an interior courtyard of Renaissance style. Located 115 km southwest of Paris, in the department of Eure-et-Loir, it combines medieval architecture with bricks and Renaissance elements. The park, built "à la française" in the 18th century, converges towards the statue of the round of Diane, a late addition commissioned by the 6th Duke of Sully.

The castle changed hands several times: acquired in 1607 by Maximilien de Béthune, Duke of Sully, who lived there 24 years and died there in 1641, he received the kings Charles VI, Louis XI, Francis I and Henry IV. Sully kept exceptional furniture, such as a sofa bed with embroidered fabrics of the figure of Anne de Courtenay (1589), today at the National Monuments Centre in Paris. The family lived there until its sale in 1812 to the Marquis de Pontoi-Pontcarré, who undertook important restorations.

Ranked a Historic Monument in 1927 (after a first attempt aborted in 1862), the castle includes a chapel with a bell of 1546, a 17th century dovecote inscribed in 1981, and protected murals. Marcel Proust inspired himself for the "Château de Guermantes" in In search of lost time, transposing Villebon into a mythical literary place. Today owned by the family of La Raudière, he has been visiting since 1994.

The park and perspectives were designed to highlight Diane's statue, while the circular dovecote, in bricks with an internal rotating scale mechanism, testifies to the agricultural techniques of Ancien Régime. A reproduction of the castle, used in the 19th century for Guérin-Boutron chocolate advertisements, was exhibited at the Museum of Popular Arts and Traditions before its closure in 2005.

The archives also mention links with the Commission des Monuments Historiques: Prosper Mérimée intervened there in 1853 to encourage its preservation, noting in a letter that the "chain sounds" of the drawbridges evoked Gothic novels. Historical furniture, dispersed, includes rare pieces such as curtains and armchairs stamped with Sully's figure, now preserved in Paris.

External links