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Château de Cordon dans l'Ain

Ain

Château de Cordon

    320 Rue du Château
    01300 Brégnier-Cordon

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
1137
Supposed transfer to Amédée II
1248
Commitment to Amédée IV
XIIe siècle
Initial construction
1434
Confiscation by Amédée VIII
1508
Partial restoration of rights
XVIIe siècle
Probable destruction
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Amédée II de Savoie - Count of Maurienne Suspected beneficiary of the inauguration in 1137.
Humbert V de Beaujeu - Connétable de France Engaged the castle in 1248 for debt.
Aynard II de Cordon - Lord of Cordon Dispossessed in 1434 for rebellion.
Claude de Cordon - Ecuyer and master d ́hotel Recaptured seigneurial justice in 1508.
Jacques de Cordon - Lord and Prior Passed the seigneury to the Costas in 1696.
Claude Sauvage - Counselor at Dôle Last known owner before 1789.

Origin and history

Cordon Castle is an ancient 12th century castle located on a hill overlooking the Rhône in Brégnier-Cordon (Ain). He served as a watchman for the marches of the Savoy states and controlled a strategic path between Peyrieu and the Marches. Its ruins, at 240 meters above sea level, are part of a 16-hectare protected natural area, classified ZNIEFF for its rare limestone lawn.

Originally, the castle was the capital of one of the oldest orders of Bugey, linked to the seigneury of Savoy from the twelfth century. In 1137, Emperor Henry IV reportedly gave way to Amédée II de Savoie, although this fact is not historically confirmed. The Counts of Savoie held the suzeraineté and passed it on to the Beaujeus via the marriage of Auxilie de Savoie with Humbert III de Beaujeu, including Valromey in the dowry.

The castle changed hands several times through alliances and transactions. In 1248, Humbert V de Beaujeu hired Amédée IV de Savoie for a debt of 2,500 pounds. In 1285, Louis I of Beaujeu handed him over to Jeanne de Montfort, Countess of Forez, and then to Louis II of Savoie, Baron of Vaud. Jean de Savoie, the husband of Marguerite de Chalon, bequeathed him to his wife in 1366, before he was subdued to the family of Cordon, perhaps its founders.

In 1434 Amédée VIII de Savoie confiscated the land for felony to Aynard II de Cordon, who had revolted. The Cordons retained some land, but lost their seigneurial justice. Claude de Cordon, squire of Duke Charles de Savoie, partially recovered these rights in 1508, obtaining permission to erect forks that were patibular. The seigneury then passed to the Costas, then to the Dortans, before being sold in 1768 to Claude Sauvage, counselor-master at Dôle.

The castle, probably destroyed in the 17th century, then served as a stone quarry. Today, there is only one part of the wall in the enclosure, a sign of its strategic role in the region. The site is home to a protected dry lawn, a natural habitat threatened by European interest, dominated by erect bromine.

External links