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Château de Barbery Saint-Sulpice à Barberey-Saint-Sulpice dans l'Aube

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Louis XIII
Aube

Château de Barbery Saint-Sulpice

    2 Allée du Château 
    10600 Barberey-Saint-Sulpice
Château de Barberey Saint-Sulpice
Château de Barberey Saint-Sulpice
Château de Barberey Saint-Sulpice
Crédit photo : Superjuju10 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1397
First lease of mill
1626
Reconstruction by Le Mairat
XVIe siècle
Initial construction
1750–1800
Completion of façade and roof
1789–1799
Sale as a national good
1er octobre 1913
Demolition of mill
18 mars 1930
First protection
22 juillet 1980
Front/roof classification
12 avril 2001
Registration of communes
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle (with the exception of facades and roofs classified): inscription by decree of 18 March 1930 - Façades and roofs (case BT 69): classification by decree of 22 July 1980 - The communes of the castle, in full (Case B 69): registration by decree of 12 April 2001

Key figures

Jean Le Mairat - Bourgeois anobli de Troyes Rebuilder of the castle in 1626.
Famille Choiseul-Praslin - Former feudal owners Possessers until 1596.
M. Petit-Buot - Revolutionary buyer Buyer as a national good.
Baron de Valsuzenay - Prefect of the Dawn Post-revolutionary owner.
Famille Le Bé - Papermakers in the 16th century Mill operators.
Edmond Denise - Papermaker in the 17th century Last operator before 1613.

Origin and history

The castle of Barbery-Saint-Sulpice finds its origins on a feudal motte occupied from the Merovingian period, as evidenced by a necropolis discovered on the site. In the 16th century, the estate belonged to the Choiseul-Praslin, who built a strong house partially preserved there. These vestiges, visible on the facade overlooking the moat, reveal defensive elements characteristic of this period, before the site passes into the hands of Le Mairat, bourgeois anoblis de Troyes.

In 1626, Jean Le Mairat undertook a complete reconstruction in the Louis XIII style, replacing the old dilapidated strong house. The castle, which included a chapel dedicated to Notre-Dame from the 16th century, was sold as a national good during the Revolution to Mr. Petit-Buot, before becoming property of the Barons of Valsuzenay, prefects of the Aube. The transformations continued until the 18th century, with the completion of the courtyard façade and the roof.

The estate also includes commons, witnesses to an unfinished first reconstruction, as well as a mill certified in 1397, operated for the manufacture of paper by the Le Bé and Denise families in the 16th and 17th centuries. This mill, demolished in 1913 after being used for electrical production, illustrates the economic activity associated with the site. The castle, protected in 1930 and partially classified in 1980, now houses a French garden recreated in 1965, labeled Remarkable Garden.

The protection of the monument extends to facades, roofs and commons, registered between 1930 and 2001. Its history reflects the architectural and social changes of the region, from medieval lords to bourgeois families of the Old Regime, to revolutionary upheavals. The proximity of Troyes and the Seine also played a key role in its development, between residential, religious and economic functions.

External links