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Davayat Castle dans le Puy-de-Dôme

Davayat Castle

    8 Rue du Château
    63200 Davayat

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1595
Construction of initial pavilion
1640 (vers)
Redevelopment of the castle
1658
Acquisition by Amable Valeix
1707
Decommissioning of the chapel
XIXe siècle
Park Transformation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Blaise Roze - Riomese trader Builder of the pavilion in 1595.
Amable Valeix - Tanning merchant Owner in 1658, country house.
Claude Dutour - Ecuyer secretary of the king Owner in the 18th, visible coat of arms.
Claude-François-Marie Attiret - Suspected architect Probable East Wing Author.
Raymond de Bar - Commander of the Army and Deputy Owner in the 19th century, legatee of the castle.
Jacques de Saulieu - Last known owner Current family owner of the estate.

Origin and history

Davayat Castle, located in Davayat in Puy-de-Dôme, is a classic style belge built in stages from 1595. Initiated by Blaise Roze, a riomese merchant, the original pavilion was rearranged around 1640 before moving in 1658 to Amable Valeix, a tanner merchant of Riom, who made it his "country house". The initial project, including two symmetrical wings, was never completed, especially because of the French Revolution which interrupted the construction of the Louis XVI wing.

The architecture of the main body, elongated on six spans and three levels, is distinguished by a pediment oculus and dormers decorated with stone balls. The east wing, probably designed by architect Claude-François-Marie Attiret (1750-1823), features a doric portico and a balustrade terrace. Claude Dutour's coat of arms, the king's secretary and owner in the 18th century, is still on the facade. The castle then passed to the families of Bar and Saulieu, still owners today.

The park, originally built in French in the 17th century, was transformed in English in the 19th century before returning to its classic design in the 20th century thanks to landscape architect Treyve. It houses a decommissioned chapel in 1707, a "flag of the refractory priest" which was used as a cache during the Revolution, as well as remarkable outbuildings (serre, orangery, stables). The castle, classified as a Historical Monument, is visited today for its furnished apartments, its collections (objects of Marie-Antoinette, 17th century library) and its centenary garden.

The interiors display historical objects, including a chair belonging to Marie-Antoinette and a chest linked to Count Axel de Fersen. The five-hectare park, structured by aisles of chestnut trees and decorated with sculptures, features a four-hundred-year-old if and a basin. Two stone lions of Volvic keep the court of honour, while the 18th wing offers a colonnade terrace of the same material.

The castle illustrates the architectural and landscape evolution of noble residences in Auvergne, from Renaissance construction to 19th and 20th century renovations. Its history also reflects political upheavals, such as the interruption of work during the Revolution or the decommissioning of the chapel in 1707, restored only in 1837.

External links