Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Castle of Promery à Pringy en Haute-Savoie

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Haute-Savoie

Castle of Promery

    Route de Ferrières
    74370 Pringy
Private property
Crédit photo : Étienne Gilli - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1316
First written entry
1578
Sale to Favre
1618
Acquisition by René Favre
1626
Date engraved on the door
1796
Sale as a national good
1951
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs; Two carriers: by order of 20 July 1951

Key figures

Pierre de Monthoux - First certified owner Sign an act in 1316
Humbert de Menthon-Lonay - Last heir of the Monthoux Sell the castle in 1578
René Favre de la Valbonne - Magistrate and purchaser Transform the castle in the 17th century
Gabriel Philibert Favre - Conflicting heir Succession disputed after 1693
Marie de Villaret - Owner in the 18th Wins the trial in 1772
Alexis Calliès - Local historian Studyed the castle (1938)

Origin and history

The castle of Promery, also called Premery or Premery, is a fortified house built in the 14th century on the town of Pringy (Haute-Savoie). Its exact origins remain blurred: built perhaps before the 14th century with techniques typical of the 13th-XIVth (rocks linked to the mortar), it belonged first to the Trombert family, then to the Monthoux by undetermined routes. The first written mention dates from 1316, when Pierre de Monthoux signed an act there in "his strong house of Promery". The site, located 1.5 km north of Pringy on the foothills of the hill of Cuvat, overlooks the right bank of Viéran, opposite the château de Monthoux.

The strong house changed hands in 1578 when Humbert de Menthon-Lonay, heir to the Monthoux, sold it for 20,000 florins to René Favre de la Valbonne, a Savoyard magistrate. The latter made it a secondary residence and undertook important works: terrace fittings (early 17th), inscriptions adorned on the walls (including a date of 1626), and interior decoration with family portraits. The estate, including seigneurial rights over the hamlet of Villaret, remained in the Favre family until the 18th century, despite complex succession conflicts after 1693.

In the 18th century, the castle passed to the La Grange (or Lagrange) by marriage, before being confiscated as national property in 1796 during the Revolution. Sold to a Mr. Delatte, it was bought in 1813 by the Lagrange family, then changed hands several times in the 19th century. Damaged by fire, it was restored after 1875. Partially listed at the Historic Monuments in 1951, it preserves Renaissance facades, characteristic roofs, and two protected porters. Its history reflects the changes of the Savoyard nobility, between feudal power and pleasure residence.

The architecture of the castle combines defensive elements (quadrangular enclosure, simulated towers) and comfort facilities (terraces, gardens, Latin or French inscriptions). The west tower houses paintings and portraits of the Favres, while the main entrance, dated 1626, has the family shield "silver to the chevron d'azur" and a welcoming motto. The jurisdictional conflicts with the neighbour château de Monthoux, attested in 1627 and 1707, underline its anchor in local rivalries.

Historical sources, including the work of Colonel Alexis Calliès (1938) and Georges Chapier (1961), reveal a continuing occupation but gaps in its origins. The family of Monthoux, the youngest branch of the Savoyard nobility, resided there until 1578, before the Favre — including René, Senator de Savoie — made it a symbol of their social ascent. The mural inscriptions, called "very unequal value" by Calliès, bear witness to the cultural aspirations of its owners, between humanism and affirmation of status.

External links