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Château d'Aulan dans la Drôme

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château Médiéval et Renaissance
Drôme

Château d'Aulan

    Le Village 
    26570 Aulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Château dAulan
Crédit photo : X. Vincent - 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
1240
Sale in Hugues du Puy-Montbrun
XIIe siècle
Initial construction
1313
Erection in feef
1640
Extinction of Espine
1796
Transition to Harouard
1933
Start of restorations
9 mai 1950
Partial classification
13 février 2009
Ranking of the Virgin of Mercy
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs: inscription by order of 9 May 1950

Key figures

Raymond IV de Mévouillon - Baron de Mévoillon Former lord salesman in 1240.
Hugues du Puy-Montbrun - Acquirer in 1240 First owner Montbrun.
Rican de l’Espine - Knight and peer First fief lord in 1313.
Isabeau de l’Espine - Last heir Married to François-Marie de Suarez.
Marie-Suzanne-Joséphine-Régis Suarez d'Aulan - Last Suarez Transmitted the castle in 1796.
Charles Harouard de Suarez d'Aulan - Restaurant restaurant (1933) Save the family castle.
Jean Giono - Writer Inspired by the castle (*L'Eau Vive*).
René Char - Poet resistant Summon the castle in *Three shots under the trees*.

Origin and history

The Château d'Aulan found its origins in the 12th century, built on an oppidum overlooking the Toulourenc valley in the Drôme. Originally owned by the barons of Mévouillon, it was ceded in 1240 to Hugues du Puy-Montbrun, then passed into the hands of the Montbrun, Baux, and finally the Dauphins of Vienna. In 1313 he became a fief for Rican of Espina, before remaining in his progeny until the end of the lineage in 1640, with the marriage of Isabel of Espina and François-Marie de Suarez.

Over the centuries, the castle lost its defensive character and underwent major changes. The French Revolution marked a dramatic turning point: looted and ruined, it was only saved by its legacy in 1796 to the Harouard family of Suarez d'Aulan, via the marriage of Marie-Suzanne-Joséphine-Régis Suarez with Jean-Joseph-Valléry Harouard. The 20th century saw its restoration from 1933, initiated by Charles Harouard de Suarez d'Aulan, after the degradations suffered during the First World War.

On a strategic level, the castle was part of an optical communication network with the Château de Mévoillon, destroyed in 1684 by order of Louis XIV. Its architecture, partially preserved, includes facades and roofs classified in 1950. Inside, a 16th-century Catalan Virgin of Mercy, acquired in 1933 and classified in 2009, bears witness to her artistic heritage.

The castle also inspired literary figures: Jean Giono placed there his new Promenade de la Mort (1943), while René Char, linked to the local Resistance, evoked in his collection Trois coups sous les arbres (1947). A Gallo-Roman tombstone, discovered on site and sealed in the courtyard, adds an archaeological dimension to the site.

Today, Aulan Castle embodies both a medieval Dauphinian heritage, a turbulent family history and a place of cultural memory, between military architecture, sacred art and literature. Its location in Aulan (Drôme), in the Provencal Baronies, makes it a witness to the historical dynamics of the region.

External links