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Castle and its park à Tencin dans l'Isère

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de plaisance
Isère

Castle and its park

    Route de Theys
    38570 Tencin
Château de Tencin
Château et son parc
Château et son parc
Château et son parc
Château et son parc
Château et son parc
Château et son parc
Château et son parc
Crédit photo : Matthieu Riegler English : This photo has been ta - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1775
Construction of the current castle
1783
Commencement of internal work
1791
Death of Louis François de Monteynard
5 octobre 1946
Registration for historical monuments
2013
Change of ownership
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle and its park: registration by order of 5 October 1946

Key figures

Louis François de Monteynard - Secretary of State for War Commander of the castle in 1775.
Jourdan du Mayard - Architect Author of the plans of the castle.
Pierre Guérin de Tencin - Cardinal and Minister of State Archbishop of Emprun and Lyon.
Claudine Guérin de Tencin - Letterwoman Mother of Jean d'Alembert.
Antoine Guérin - Lord of Tencin Owner of the old feudal castle.

Origin and history

Tencin Castle, also known as the Château du Cruzille or Monteynard, is an 18th-century building in the municipality of Tencin, Isère. Built in 1775 by Louis François de Monteynard, Secretary of State for the War of Louis XV, it replaces a former feudal castle destroyed during the Wars of Religion. The plans were designed by architect Jourdan du Mayard, assisted by a descendant of Jules Hardouin-Mansard. Originally, the garden was designed in French, with a large circular floor and a bridge in front of the facade. The triangular pediment, adorned with Monteynard weapons, dominates the central forebody.

The interior works, begun in 1783, were interrupted by the French Revolution. The castle, unfinished, then served as a military warehouse, which preserved it from destruction. Although Louis François de Monteynard had never inhabited him, his heirs completed the work under the First Empire. The park, now landscaped, preserves cedars and a terrace, vestige of the original garden. A double staircase, inspired by the style of Fontainebleau, was added in 1840 in front of the facade.

The castle houses a Louis XV leather salon in Cordoba, classified as a historical monument. Owned by the Monteynard family, followed by a stationery businessman and a Mauritian businessman since 2013, it is currently on sale. The association The life of Tencin Castle works to preserve its material and intangible heritage. The site was listed as a historical monument in 1946 and bears witness to the aristocratic architecture of the eighteenth century and its evolution over the centuries.

External links