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Château de Cieurac dans le Lot

Lot

Château de Cieurac

    310 Château de Cieurac
    46230 Cieurac

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIIe siècle
Construction of the castle
1356-1358
English occupation
vers 1500
Renaissance reconstruction
1532
Wedding of Antoine-Hector de Cardaillac
1629
Extinction of the line Cardaillac
1733
Adding kitchens
1794
Revolutionary Pillage
1938
Historical Monument
juin 1944
Fire by SS Division
1974
Purchase by Claude Afchain
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Raymond de Cardaillac (1450-1501) - Lord and Rebuilder Initiator of the Renaissance reconstruction after 1487.
Jean-Jacques de Cardaillac (1476-1515) - Governor of Quercy Continues the work of the castle.
Antoine-Hector de Cardaillac (vers 1500-1567) - Protestant Lord Fortified the castle in the 16th century.
Jacques de Godailh - Baron de Cieurac Added the kitchens in 1733.
Pierre-Jacques de Godailh-Cieurac - Last Lord Before the Revolution Guillotiné in 1794, looted castle.
Claude Afchain - Owner restaurant Acheta the castle in 1974.

Origin and history

The castle of Cieurac, located in the Lot in Occitanie, finds its origins in the 13th century with a first castle of which remains remains at the north and south ends of the present house. Owned by the family of Cardaillac, coseigneurs of the region, he was occupied and looted by the English between 1356 and 1358 during the Hundred Years War. After its restoration to the Cardaillacs, the castle was rebuilt from the end of the 15th century by Raymond de Cardaillac, participating in the Italian wars under Charles VIII, then by his son Jean-Jacques, governor of Quercy.

In the 16th century, the castle passed into the hands of Antoine-Hector de Cardaillac, converted to Protestantism, who strengthened it before the direct line died in 1629. Transferred to Godailh's family by marriage, he underwent changes such as the addition of a building body for kitchens in 1733. The French Revolution marked a tragic turning point: the owner, Pierre-Jacques de Godailh-Cieurac, was guillotined in 1794, and the castle, looted, lost its Gothic chapel. He then changed hands, passing to the mayor of Cieurac, the citizen Caminel, and then to the Dulac family by inheritance.

The 20th century brought new challenges: in June 1944, the SS Das Reich division burned down the castle, destroying roofs, ceilings classified as historical monuments since 1938, and archives. A temporary roof was installed in 1950, followed by a staircase in 1956. In 1974, Claude Afchain acquired the castle and undertook its restoration. Ranked since 1938, it is one of the most remarkable Renaissance castles in Quercy, alongside Montal or Cénevières, testifying to a rich but tormented architectural and historical heritage.

External links