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Castle of Sermaizey à Laives en Saône-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Saône-et-Loire

Castle of Sermaizey

    Rue de Sermaisey
    71240 Laives
Château de Sermaizey
Château de Sermaizey
Château de Sermaizey
Château de Sermaizey
Château de Sermaizey
Château de Sermaizey
Crédit photo : Chabe01 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVe siècle
First mention of the castle
1590
Owned by Francis Abraham Nyod
1628
Purchase by Louis Mercier
23 avril 1947
Historical monument classification
2007
Pigeon's collapse
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts and roofs: inscription by decree of 23 April 1947

Key figures

François-Abraham Nyod - Lord of Sermaizey Owner in 1590.
Louis Mercier - Acquirer in 1628 Family transforming the castle.
Charles de Châteauneuf de Randon, marquis d’Apcher - Owner late 18th Fief confiscated from the Revolution.

Origin and history

The castle of Sermaizey, located in Laives in Saône-et-Loire, appears on a plan of the 15th century as an ensemble composed of a house and a round tower with a conical roof. Today, the body of the western house remains mainly, marked by a western facade pierced by regular openings and a tower of hexagonal staircase backed by the eastern facade. A square semi-outbuilding tower, once home to a chapel dedicated to the Virgin, completes the whole, while a circular pigeon house stands nearby.

The history of the castle dates back to at least the 15th century, although its first owner remains unknown. In 1590, the seigneury belonged to François-Abraham Nyod, before being acquired in 1628 by Louis Mercier, whose family expanded the estate. After the extinction of the Mercier in 1683, the fief changed hands several times, notably passing to the Marquis of Apcher in the late eighteenth century, before being confiscated during the Revolution. The dovecote collapsed in 2007, suffering from a severe winter and a maintenance defect.

Architecturally, the castle mixes medieval elements (windows in the middle, bas-reliefs religious) and reshuffles of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, such as the staircase turret with bays in braid. Ranked a historic monument in 1947 for its facades and roofs, there remains a private property not open to the public. The coat of arms of the d'Apcher family, associated with the castle, evoke a castle with three towers and hallesbardes, symbols of their lineage.

Historical sources also refer to local bibliographical references, such as L. Niepce (1877) or J.-L. Bailly (1907), which document the history of the canton of Sennecey-le-Grand and Laives. The castle thus illustrates the evolution of a Burgundy seigneury, between architectural transformations and changes of owners, reflecting the political and social upheavals of the region.

External links