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Cognac Castle en Charente

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Charente

Cognac Castle

    127, boulevard Denfert Rochereau 
    16100 Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Château de Cognac
Crédit photo : JLPC - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1031
Foundation of the Priory Saint-Léger
Xe siècle (vers 950)
Castrum Foundation
XIIIe siècle
Stone reconstruction
1366-1370
Residence of the Black Prince
1450
Reconstruction by Jean de Valois
1494
Birth of François I
1517
Enlargement by François I
1756-1757
Prison during the Seven Years' War
1795
Buy by Otard and Dupuy
1852
Destruction of the chapel
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château de François-Ier : inscription by order of 15 May 1925

Key figures

Hélie de Villebois - First Lord of Cognac Founder of the castrum around 950.
Guy de Lusignan - Count and transformer of the castle Fortify the city in the 13th century.
Jean de Valois - Count of Angoulême Reconstructed the castle in 1450.
François Ier - King of France Born in the castle, the house was enlarged in 1517.
Jean-Baptiste Antoine Otard - Trading in brandy Buy the castle in 1795.
Édouard de Woodstock (Prince noir) - Prince of Aquitaine Residence at the castle between 1366 and 1370.

Origin and history

The castle of Cognac, also named Château des Valois or Château François I, finds its origins in the 10th century with the construction of a wooden castrum by Hélie de Villebois, first lord of Cognac. Around the year 1000, the dynasty of the Villebois settled, and a village was formed around the Benedictine castrum and priory of Saint-Léger, founded in 1031. No trace of this first fortress remained, but medieval charters attest to its existence. The site, strategic on the banks of the Charente, becomes an issue for the local lords and the Counts of Angoulême.

In the 13th century, the Counts of Lusignan, successors of Taillefer, transformed the castle into a stone fortress and fortified the city. Guy de Lusignan, then his son Hugues X (spouse of Isabelle d'Angoulême, widow of John without Earth), mark this period. The castle changed hands several times during the Hundred Years War, passing between English and French. In 1366-1370 he even housed Edward of Woodstock, known as the Black Prince, the son of Edward III of England. The seigneury finally returned to the crown of France under Philippe le Bel, but conflicts persisted until Jean de Valois returned in 1450.

The 15th century inaugurated the Golden Century of the Valois in Cognac. Jean de Valois, Count of Angoulême, undertook the reconstruction of the castle in ruins with his wife Marguerite de Rohan. Their son, Charles de Valois, and his wife Louise de Savoie made it an intellectual and artistic home, welcoming their daughter Marguerite de Navarre and their son, the future François I, born in Cognac in 1494. Around 1517, François I enlarged the castle by adding a body of Renaissance houses facing the docks, marked by salamanders and his coat of arms. The sober facade, raised in the 19th century, preserves medallions carved with its effigy.

After a decline in the 17th and 18th centuries, the castle served as a prison during the Seven Years' War (1756-1757), where graffiti of foreign prisoners were still visible. Sold as national property after the Revolution, the premises were bought in 1795 by traders in brandies, Otard and Dupuy, who installed their cellars there. Although destruction took place (scraped in 1852, northeast tower in 1812), the company Otard carried out restorations. Today, the castle, private property, mixes medieval remains (the tower of Count Jean, the residence of the Governor) and Renaissance elements, testifying to its turbulent history.

The current architecture mainly reflects the work of the Valois. The tower of Count John (11th century) houses a rare medieval oven system and an inner well. The residence of the Governor, with its Gothic gate and its weapons fireplace of Valois-Angoulême, preserves remains of the 12th century (archatures, capitals). The vaulted cellars and guard rooms, decorated with 18th-century graffiti, recall the prison practices. The west facade, raised in 1852, dominates the quays of the Charente, while the two mâchicoulis towers (1499-1500) are the last remains of the ramparts.

External links