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Castillet de Perpignan dans les Pyrénées-Orientales

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Fortification
Pyrénées-Orientales

Castillet de Perpignan

    Place de Verdun
    66000 Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Castillet de Perpignan
Crédit photo : Christophe Marcheux - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1368
Construction of the Grand Castillet
1478-1485
Added the Petit Castillet
1542
Construction of polygonal bastion
1889
Historical Monument
1948
Discovery of a child's skeleton
1963
Opening of the Catalan Museum
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castillet, Grand-Castillet, porte Notre-Dame or Petit-Castillet : classification by list of 1889

Key figures

Jean d’Aragon - Infant from Aragon Commander of the Grand Castillet in 1368.
Guillaume Gatard - Owner Builder of the Grand Castillet.
Bonissi - Italian architect Designer of the Petit Castillet (1478).
Charles Quint - Emperor of the Holy Empire Order the polygonal bastion in 1542.
Vauban - Military engineer Strengthens the bastion in the 17th century.
Louis Xaragai - Municipal Librarian Discoverer of the skeleton in 1948.

Origin and history

The Castillet, or Castellet in Catalan, is a historical monument of Perpignan which served as a city gate, defensive fortress and state prison. Built in three distinct phases, it consists of the Grand Castillet (1368), the Porte Notre-Dame or Petit Castillet (1481-1485), and a polygonal bastion (1542). Its unique military architecture, combining Moorish and medieval influences, makes it a symbol of the city. It is now listed as a Historical Monument and houses the Catalan Museum of Popular Arts and Traditions, called Casa Pairal.

The Grand Castillet was erected in 1368 under the command of the Infant Jean d'Aragon by the master builder Guillaume Gatard, to replace the old door of the Vernet and strengthen the city's defences. Designed as a castle, it included a drawbridge and thick 3.5-metre walls at the base. After Louis XI's ephemeral occupation of the Roussillon, the Castillet lost its defensive role and was transformed into a state prison, with fenced windows and dungeons in its basements.

In 1478, the Petit Castillet was joined to the Grand Castillet to maintain an exit to the suburbs of the Vernet, while the city was under French domination. This new element, called Portal de Nostra Dona del Pont, was harmonized with existing Aragonese architecture. In 1542 Charles Quint added a polygonal bastion in front of the Grand Castillet, using the materials of the Notre-Dame du Pont chapel, demolished for strategic reasons. A statue of the Virgin, originally placed in this chapel, was then incorporated into the façade of the Castillet.

In the 17th century, Vauban strengthened the bastion and put the Castillet in a state of defence, while a Guard Corps was built on the south side (demoli in 1843). In 1904, much of the walls of Perpignan were destroyed, insulating the Castillet. In the 20th century, it will successively house the municipal archives and, from 1963 onwards, the Catalan Museum of Folk Arts and Traditions. His story also includes a macabre riddle: in 1948, the skeleton of a child, probably dating from the late 19th century, was discovered in a small of the Petit Castillet, without his identity ever being elucidated.

The Castillet illustrates the architectural and political developments of Perpignan, marked by the changes of domination between Aragon, France and Spain. Its style, combining bricks, pebbles and Gothic or Moorish elements, reflects the cultural influences of the region. Ranked a Historical Monument in 1889, it remains a major testimony of the military and prison history of the Roussillon, while playing today a cultural role through its ethnographic museum.

External links