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Castle à Frôlois en Côte-d'or

Castle

    4 Bis Rue de l'Église
    21150 Frôlois
Private property
Château
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Crédit photo : Prosopee - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1117
Conflict between Frôlois and Mont-Saint-Jean
1243 et 1301
Châtellenie dependent on Saint-Seine
1372
Donjon excluded from the domain
1614
Confirmation of dungeon status
1683
Sale to Pierre du Ban
1795
Acquisition by Nicolas Pierre Regnault
1924
Mention of a strong castle
1977 et 1991
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs; Chamber of Antoine de Vergy and its decor (Case AD 16): inscription by order of 21 December 1977; Support and enclosure walls (Case AD 2, 16-18, 225): inscription by order of 19 March 1991

Key figures

Pierre du Ban de la Feuillée - Owner in 1683 Frôlois in County.
Nicolas Pierre Regnault - Acquirer in 1795 Post-Revolution purchasing.
Antoine de Vergy - Character associated with a room Decor classified under MH.

Origin and history

The château de Frôlois is a medieval fortress built in the 13th century, then transformed in the 14th and 18th centuries. Situated at the southern end of the village of Frôlois (Côte d'Or), it overlooks the Vau valley and the departmental road 122 by 100 metres. Its strategic location on a rocky spur makes it a major defensive site, once surrounded by walls, a ditch cut in the rock, and protected by a drawbridge before the entrance.

In 1117 there were conflicts between the seigneuries of Frôlois and Mont-Saint-Jean. The archives attest that in 1243 and 1301 the châtellenie was the fief of Saint-Seine. In 1372, the castle — with the exception of its dungeon, owned by the Rhodes Hospital — was surrounded by ramparts and houses a church, a presbytery and a cemetery in its enclosure. This status was confirmed in 1614. The fortress, the capital of a barony of the Duchy of Burgundy, passed in 1683 to Pierre du Ban de la Feuillée, who littered in the county.

In the 17th century, a house body partially replaced the old structures. The 18th century salon, decorated with Bergamo's Italian painted tapestries, bears witness to subsequent developments. In 1795, the estate was acquired by Nicolas Pierre Regnault. In the 20th century, remains of remains classified as Historic Monument: facades, roofs, walls, and a room decorated by Antoine de Vergy, protected since 1977 and 1991.

Today's architecture thus combines medieval defensive elements—top terraces, moats—and residential spaces of Modern Times. The site illustrates the evolution of a Burgundian stronghold, marked by feudal conflicts, then by its adaptation to seigneurial uses under the Old Regime.

External links