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Château de Châtellenot en Côte-d'or

Côte-dor

Château de Châtellenot

    2 Rue de l'Église
    21320 Châtellenot

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1100
Initial construction
1140
First written entry
1196
Ducal ownership
XIVe siècle
Strengthenings for the Hundred Years War
1770
Destruction of the dungeon
1789-1799
Revolutionary damage
1959-1982
Occupation by Jacques Gérin
années 1980-présent
Partial restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Milo de Castellulo - Medieval Lord First mentioned owner (1140).
Guillaume de Châtellenot - Local Lord Burdened at the Abbey of Bussière (1229).
Jehan de Chasteullonnet - Cook Participated in the Scotland campaign (1384).
Béatrice de Vaucelle - Lady of Châtellenot Widow in 1317, gave the castle to Étienne de Mont-Saint-Jean.
Jacques Gérin - Engineer and inventor Occupant (1959-1982), aeronautical/automobile specialist.
Famille Le Belin de Châtellenot - Modern owners President of the Melun Commercial Court.

Origin and history

Châtellenot Castle, built around 1100 on a rocky spur at 600 m above sea level, replaces an ancient Roman camp. Its first fortifications (XII-XIII centuries) included a cul-de-four apse and a dry ditch cut into the rock, partially filled with the Revolution. The drawbridge, among the oldest of the Côte-d的Or, was mentioned as early as 1140 with Milo de Castellulo, while the central dungeon, destroyed in 1770, housed archaeological remains (skelps, weapons, burnt grains).

Property ducale in 1196, the castle passes into the hands of noble families like the Châtellenot, Mont-Saint-Jean, or Burgundy. During the Hundred Years' War (14th century), it was reinforced by ditches and a high dungeon, now extinct. In 1384, the Secuyer Jehan de Chasteullonnet participated in the campaign of Scotland under Jean de Vienne. The fief, often sold or taken over (e.g. bought for £400 in 1266), underwent major changes, including an extension under Napoleon III.

The French Revolution marked a turning point: the dungeon was shot down, the stones reused for the village, and the undergrounds (forgetts) walled in the 19th century. In the 20th century, the engineer Jacques Gérin (1959-1982), inventor of the car safety wheel, occupied the place before their acquisition by a passionate family. Recent restorations saved 60% of the roofs and rebuilt the northern rampart (10 m high). The 14th century dovecote, accessible by the attic, still houses stone and pottery bolts.

The architecture mixes medieval and modern styles, with a 60 m well dug in the rock and traces of a French garden. The site, a water-sharing point, offers an exceptional panorama of the Auxois, Morvan and Bussière-sur-Ouche. Its historical role includes the route of the Burgundy Canal, decided from its terraces. Today, the castle combines medieval ruins and 18th to 19th century developments.

Ranked among the strong castles of Côte-d-Or, Châtellenot illustrates the military and seigneurial transformations, from feudality to revolution. Its remains, including the drawbridge tower and the dovecote, make it a rare witness to Burgundy history, between conflicts, family heritage and architectural innovations.

External links