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Château d'Annecy en Haute-Savoie

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Haute-Savoie

Château d'Annecy

    1 Place du Château
    74000 Annecy
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Crédit photo : Silex - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIe siècle
Initial construction
1340
Fire and reconstruction
1401
Passage to Savoie
1514–1659
Apanage de Genevois-Nemours
1600
Visit to Henri IV
1953
Restoration and museum
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Buildings and floors of courtyards inside the enclosure, including the enclosure (Box B 1240): classification by order of 12 October 1959

Key figures

Amédée III de Genève - Count of Geneva Reconstructs the castle after the 1340 fire.
Amédée VIII de Savoie - Duke of Savoie Restaura the castle, received Pope Martin V.
Charlotte d’Orléans-Longueville - Duchess of Geneva-Nemours Fits build the Logis Nemours in 1545.
Robert de Genève (Clément VII) - Pope (anti-pap) Born in the castle in 1342, there began work.
Henri IV - King of France Stayed at the castle in 1600.
Saint François de Sales - Bishop of Annecy Intervening during the plot of 1616.

Origin and history

The castle of Annecy, built from the 12th century on a rocky spur overlooking the city, was the residence of the Counts of Geneva before passing to the Dukes of Savoy. After a fire in 1340 by Amédée III, it was enlarged and embellished by Amédée VIII in the 15th century, becoming a symbol of Savoyard power. Its successive changes, notably by the Savoy-Nemours in the 16th century, reflect its strategic role between Geneva and Italy.

The fortress, with a polygonal enclosure and massive towers such as the Queen's Tower (XIII–XIVth centuries) or the Perrière Tower (XVth century), monitored commercial roads and lake bridges. It housed prestigious halls, such as the Grand Hall of Feasts (1333) or Logis Nemours (1545), reflecting the fascist of the Dukes. After centuries of military transformation (case, prison), the castle, classified as a Historical Monument in 1959, was restored by the city of Annecy in 1953.

Owned by the Counts of Geneva until the 15th century, the castle passed to the Savoys after 1401, serving as residence for the governors of the locality of Genevois-Nemours. He welcomed historical figures such as Pope Clement VII (born Robert of Geneva in 1342) or Henry IV in 1600. Occupied by the revolutionary and then imperial armies, it became a national good in 1793 before being transformed into a museum in the 20th century, preserving medieval and reborn decorations.

The site, marked by fires (1340, 1412, 1952) and conflicts (wars of Burgundy, Spanish occupation in 1742) illustrates the architectural and political evolution of Savoy. Today, it houses the Annecy Castle Museum and the Alpine Lakes Regional Observatory, while offering panoramic views of the old town and lake.

Annecy's chestnut, reporting directly to the Count of Geneva, covered about 255 km2 and played a key administrative role. The Chatelans, appointed to manage the estate and collect revenues, were gradually integrated into the Savoyard administration after 1401. The castle, seat of this mandate, embodied the comtal and then ducal power over the region.

External links