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Château de Barbarin à Revel-Tourdan dans l'Isère

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Isère

Château de Barbarin

    780 Route de Pisieu
    38270 Revel-Tourdan
Château de Barbarin
Château de Barbarin
Château de Barbarin
Château de Barbarin
Château de Barbarin
Château de Barbarin
Château de Barbarin
Crédit photo : vue aérienne d'un drone par le propriétaire du châ - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1441
Expansion by Saussac
XIVe siècle
Initial construction
1566
Acquisition by Saint-Julien
1728–1732
Conventional arrangements
1984
Land separation
2011
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades and roofs, the staircase and the room decorated with paintings of the first floor of the castle, as well as the facades and roofs of the two pavilions of the terrace and the plots AH 99, 224, 225 of the property of Barbarin: inscription by decree of 27 October 2011

Key figures

François de Revel - Founding Lord (XIVe) Run the initial quadrangular tower.
Josserand de Saussac - Baron du Velay (XVth) Expanded the strong house in 1441.
Octavien Emé de Saint-Julien - President of Parliament (XVIe) Add round tower and courtyard (1586).
Laurent Joseph Emé de Saint-Julien - Marquis de Marcieu (XVIIIth) Turn the estate into a residence.
Philippe Seigle - Owner since 1993 Restores and opens to the public.

Origin and history

The castle of Barbarin is an ancient fortified house erected in the 14th century on the heights of Revel (today Revel-Tourdan, Isère). Built of stone of molass and pebbles, this quadrangular tower served first as a military observatory to monitor the Bièvre plain and alert the nearby Castle of Revel. Its founder, François de Revel, lord of the fief, made it a strategic point linked to the family of Revel, owner of the premises since 1077. The initial structure, on a dry ditch, will evolve with successive additions until the 18th century.

In the 15th century, the fortified house was enlarged by Josserand de Saussac and his wife Marie de Rousillon, who added a high and low courtyard as well as two painted rooms. The site then passes into the hands of the family of Saint-Julien: in 1566, Octavien Emé de Saint-Julien, president of the parliament of the Dauphiné, adorned his architectural mark with a round tower and a court, despite a long trial for his possession. Interior decorations (stuces, orange red murals) date from this period.

The 17th–15th centuries transformed Barbarin into an area of pleasure. Laurent Joseph Emé de Saint-Julien pierced 23 windows on the south facade, built terraced gardens and built a three-nave barn (1728–1732). Sold in 1745 for 500,000 pounds to Pierre Hilaire de Lamaletie, treasurer of France, the property changed hands several times before being split in 1984: the castle was then separated from its lands for the first time. After decades of abandonment, it has been restored since 1993 by Philippe Seigle, who develops cultural and tourist activities.

Today a private property open to the public, Barbarin has been protected since 2011 (inscription MH for its facades, roofs, staircases and paintings on the first floor). The association People of Barbarin organizes visits, guest rooms and activities, integrating the site with the network of castles Alpes-Isère and the Journées du Patrimoine. Its history reflects the changes of a strong house, from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance, through its role as a seigneurial residence and then as an agricultural estate.

Architecturally, the castle preserves traces of its successive phases: the medieval quadrangular tower (XIVe), the rectangular house (XVe), and the defensive corner tower (before 1586) with firemouths. The interiors reveal a French ceiling, stuccos, and murals rediscovered in 2009. The outbuildings (grange, stable, dovecote) bear witness to its agricultural past, while the gardens and pavilions illustrate its classic age.

External links