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Cabrot Castle à Montbron en Charente

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Charente

Cabrot Castle

    Chabrot
    16220 Montbron
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Château de Chabrot
Crédit photo : Père Igor - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIVe siècle
Construction of the house and dungeon
XVIe siècle
Renaissance facilities
1790
Mayor of Montbron
12 octobre 1973
Registration MH
2012
Restoration of the dungeon
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs (including the two north galleries) and facades of the isolated round tower (Box H 55): inscription by order of 12 October 1973

Key figures

Jean Gédéon du Rousseau de Chabrot - Owner and Mayor Mayor of Montbron in 1790.

Origin and history

Chabrot Castle is a medieval building located in the commune of Montbron in the Charente department, New Aquitaine. Built mainly in the 14th and 16th centuries, it consists of a rectangular house with a high roof in flat tiles, flanked by cylindrical turrets, and an isolated circular dungeon. The estate, crossed by the Tardoire, is close to Ferrières Castle, only 100 meters downstream. Its architecture reflects the defensive and residential features of the castles of that time.

The castle belonged to the Rousseau family, notably Jean Gédéon du Rousseau de Chabrot, mayor of Montbron in 1790. Two accesses lead to the castle: a passage to ford on the Tardoire and a path from the city. The interior façade features two superimposed galleries, one of which is made of wood, resting on broken arcades. The lower stone gallery supports the upper structure, typical of Renaissance developments.

The building was listed as historical monuments on 12 October 1973 for its facades, roofs, and the two northern galleries. The medieval dungeon, partially deconstructed, was completely restored in 2012. Today, the castle preserves defensive elements such as pepper towers and a murmured door overlooking a spiral staircase, testimony of its seigneurial past.

The communes, located in the north, once housed agricultural outbuildings. The massive and deconstructed West Tower could have served as a dungeon to an ancient castel. The site, although partially accessible, remains a remarkable example of Charentaise castral architecture, combining military and residential functions throughout the centuries.

External links