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Château des Allymes à Ambérieu-en-Bugey dans l'Ain

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Ain

Château des Allymes

    Hameau de Brey de vent, Route des Allymes
    01500 Ambérieu-en-Bugey
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Château des Allymes
Crédit photo : Classiccardinal - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1310
Initial construction
1335
Assignment to Savoy
1354
Infeodation in Nicod François
1477
Passage to the Lucinge
1557
Partial Demolition
1565
Renaissance Restoration
1601
Treaty of Lyon
1847
Restoration by de Tricaud
1960
Historical monument classification
1984
City acquisition
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle (cad. C 1088) : Order of 20 July 1960; Ruins of the former outer enclosure, placed Bredevent (Case C 712, 715): inscription by order of 21 August 1967; Vestiges de la basse-cour, de la barbacane, de la tour exterior nord et de la courtine (Box C 712, 714): classification by order of 2 December 1993

Key figures

Jean II de Viennois - Dolphin of Vienna Sponsor of the building around 1310
Peronnet et Guillemet d'Hières - Master masons Stone builders in the 14th century
Nicod François - Treasurer of Savoie First indecent lord in 1354
Humbert de Lucinge - Lord of Allyms (XVth century) Husband of Claudine François in 1477
Charles de Lucinge - Lord Conspirator Responsible for partial demolition in 1557
René de Lucinge - Ambassador and historian Negotiator of the Treaty of Lyon (1601)
Adolphe de Tricaud - Restaurant restaurant (XIXe s.) Heir and court builder

Origin and history

The Allymes Castle is an ancient building built around 1310 by John II, a dolphin of Vienna, in response to the Delphino-Savoyard War. Originally made of land and wood, it was rebuilt in stone after the truce of 1335, then ceded to the Count of Savoy. His master masons, Peronnet and Guillemet d'Hières, made it a strategic fortress at the gates of the independent Savoy.

In 1354, Count Amédée VI de Savoie inferred the castle to his treasurer Nicod François for 2,000 florins. In 1477 the seigneury passed to the family of Lucinge by marriage, and was partially demolished in 1557 after a plot against Lyon. The Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis (1559) allows its restoration with a Renaissance home around 1565.

In the 17th century, René de Lucinge, Savoyard refugee ambassador to France, negotiated the Treaty of Lyon (1601) there before taking the oath to Henri IV. The castle, poorly maintained, escapes the Revolution. Restored in the 19th century by Adolphe de Tricaud, it is classified as a historic monument in 1960 and has been owned since 1984 by the city of Ambérieu-en-Bugey.

Architecturally, the castle combines a 14th-century Romanesque dungeon, a taluted cylindrical tower, and a 16th-century Gothic house with a walnut staircase. Its courtines, round path and barbacan were reconstructed in the 19th century. The site, searched since the 1960s, offers an exceptional view of the Bresse and the Dombes.

Fully protected (except the southern barn), it houses exhibitions on René de Lucinge and local history. Managed by the association Les Amis du Château des Allymes, it symbolizes the delphino-savoyard conflicts and the evolution of military architecture from the Middle Ages to the modern era.

External links