First mention of *castrum* XIIIe siècle (≈ 1350)
Cartular of Maguelone evokes Candillhanicis.
1624
Construction of the current castle
Construction of the current castle 1624 (≈ 1624)
Purchased by Jean de Lauzelergues.
XIXe siècle
Wine peak under Galtayries
Wine peak under Galtayries XIXe siècle (≈ 1865)
Fields and giant cellars (40,000 hl).
1931-1935
Morcellation of the domain
Morcellation of the domain 1931-1935 (≈ 1933)
Sale to heirs after revolution.
années 1980
Castle Division
Castle Division années 1980 (≈ 1980)
Cutting into private lots.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Jean de Lauzelergues - Lord and builder
Buyer in 1624, sponsor of the castle.
Famille de La Croix - Noble owners
Conservation until after the Revolution.
Émile Galtayries - Wine owner
Developer of the estate in the 19th century.
Origin and history
Candillargues Castle, mentioned as Candilhanicis Castrum in the 13th century, is a historic site anchored in the Languedoc landscape. The first written traces come from Maguelone's cartular, revealing a medieval occupation before the major transformations of the following centuries.
In the 17th century, Jean de Lauzelergues acquired the seigneury in 1624 and erected the present building. The castle then passed to the family of La Croix, a nobility of the Languedoc, which kept it until the Revolution. Its architecture includes remarkable elements such as dogive vaults and a staircase combining straight flights and dayless screws.
In the 19th century, the castle became the heart of a vast wine estate under Émile Galtayries. In 1893, its cellars, capable of storing 40,000 hectolitres, illustrated the economic growth of the village, whose population tripled between 1851 and 1912. The estate was fragmented in 1931-1935, then the castle itself was divided into lots in the 1980s.
Today private property, the castle is listed in the General Inventory of Cultural Heritage. Its history reflects the social and economic changes of Languedoc, from feudality to industrial viticulture, to revolutionary upheavals.
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