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Castrum of Orgueil dans le Lot

Lot

Castrum of Orgueil

    Orgueil et Ozeran
    46700 Mauroux

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1900
2000
1114
First seigneurial mention
1245
Citation of castrum
1270-1271
Charter of Customs
1292
Installation of a royal bayle
1380-1389
Occupation by English companies
1390
Deposition of castrum
1993
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Gausbert-Borrelh d’Orgueil - Lord and donor First mention in 1114.
Philippe IV le Bel - King of France Installed a royal bayle in 1292.
Guillaume de Clarens - English company manager Occupying Organ in 1380.
Jean Lescop - English company manager Maintained Orgueil in 1387.
Comte d’Armagnac - Purchaser of castrum Repurchase in 1389 for 11,000 francs.

Origin and history

The Castrum d'Orgueil, now in ruins, was a medieval fortified complex located in Mauroux, Lot department. His first attested lords appeared in 1114, during a donation to the abbey of Moissac by Gausbert-Borrelh of Orgueil. The Orgueil family, perhaps linked to the lords of Luzech, dominates the site, divided between six co-seigneurs under the suzerainety of the Count of Toulouse. Castrum, combined with a port on the Lot and a dam (the Fossat), plays a key role in river trade and local conflicts.

Around 1270-1271, the co-signors granted a charter of customs to the castrum, affirming their baronial authority. After the death of Alphonse de Poitiers (1271), King Philip IV the Bel inherits the rights and installs a royal bayle in Orgueil in 1292 to limit local power. During the Hundred Years' War, the Lords of Orgueil supported the King of England: the site became a closed camp occupied by "English" companies, such as Guillaume de Clarens (1380) or Jean Lescop (1387).

The decline began with the abandonment of the castrum around 1390, after it was bought by the Count of Armagnac for 11,000 francs in order to end the abuses. The excavations of the 1970s and 1982s revealed the remains of the dam, landings and a common mill, confirming its economic importance. The ruins, inscribed in the historical monuments in 1993, bear witness to its seigneurial and strategic past between Quercy and Aquitaine.

External links