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Ain

Castle

    245 Impasse du Château
    01680 Groslée-Saint-Benoit
Crédit photo : Aurélien Prudhomme - 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
vers 1180
Initial construction
1323
Attachment to Dauphiné
1420
Sale to Savoie
1455
Repurchase by Groslée
1580
County Erection
1777
Last fief before the Revolution
1992
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

All remains (Case B 1304, 573): inscription by order of 5 October 1992

Key figures

Jacques de Groslée - Sénéchal de Lyon and founder Builds the castle around 1180.
Jocelyne de Groslée - Local Lord Recognises the dolphin fief in 1323.
Antoine de Groslée - Knight of the order of the necklace Sell the seigneury in 1420.
Jean de Groslée - Chanoine-comte de Lyon Buy the seigneury back in 1455.
Claude de Groslée - First Earl of Groslée Built in county in 1580.
Joseph-Marie de Barral - Marquis de Montferrat Last lord before the Revolution.

Origin and history

The Château de Groslée is a former castle built around 1180 by Jacques de Groslée, Sénéchal de Lyon, in the present commune of Groslée-Saint-Benoît (Ain). Originally built in the parish of Oilieux, it becomes a strategic issue between the Counts of Savoy and the dolphin of Vienna. Over the centuries, it was restored in the 15th and 16th centuries, then dismantled in the 18th century, leaving only its 12th century square dungeon, surrounded by a shirt and round towers adapted to firearms.

The seigneury of Groslée, erected in baronie and then in county in 1580 by Duke Charles-Emmanuel I of Savoy, changed hands several times. First owned by the Counts of Savoy in the early 14th century, it was sold in 1420 to Pierre de Bourbon before being bought in 1455 by Jacques de Groslée, nephew of Jean de Groslée, canon-count of Lyon. Groslée's family preserved the property until the 17th century, when it passed by alliance to the Cros, then to the Barral de Montferrat before the Revolution.

The castle houses a private chapel, where two weekly Masses are celebrated with permission from the Archbishop of Lyon. Its architecture combines medieval defensive elements (donjon, round towers) and Renaissance facilities. Ranked a historical monument in 1992, it bears witness to the feudal history of Bugey and the rivalries between Savoy and Dauphiné. Today, its remains belong to a private company.

The excavations and architectural descriptions reveal a complex organization: a courtyard girdled with walls, a partially preserved quadrangular dungeon, traces of residential buildings (slides with screws, chimneys), and a terrace supported by vaults dug into the rock. The site, although partially destroyed, offers a remarkable example of the evolution of castles between the Middle Ages and modern times.

The location of the castle, on a hilltop overlooking the Rhône, underlines its strategic role of river and territorial control. Its history reflects the political dynamics of the region, marked by alliances between noble families, changes in sovereignty (Savoie, Dauphiné, France), and architectural transformations related to military progress (adaptation to firearms in the 15th to 16th centuries).

External links