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Château de Créans and its outbuildings dans la Sarthe

Sarthe

Château de Créans and its outbuildings

    1 La Commanderie
    72800 Clermont-Créans
Château de Créans et ses dépendances
Château de Créans et ses dépendances
Château de Créans et ses dépendances
Crédit photo : HubertduMaine - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIe–XIIIe siècle
Construction of the corner tower
1423
Fire during the Hundred Years War
1474
Restoration by René Fresneau
1633
End of seigneurial dwelling
1734
Purchase by Jesuits of La Flèche
1792
Revolutionary sale
1892
Repurchase by Paul d'Estournelles from Constant
30 décembre 1905
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château de Créans and its outbuildings (chapelle, moats, tower): classification by decree of 30 December 1905

Key figures

René Fresneau de Créans - Lord and restorer (15th century) Transforms the castle into Renaissance style.
Princesse Alexandrine de Bourbon - Former owner (1734) Selled the castle to the Jesuits.
Paul d’Estournelles de Constant - Owner-restaurant (1892) Saved the estate until today.
Henri Laffillée - Architect (early 20th century) Restore the chestnut and its decor.

Origin and history

The castle of Creans, located in Clermont-Créans in the Sarthe, has its origins in the 15th century, although a tower dating from the 12th to the 13th centuries still remains. Built to control river traffic on the Loir, it was organized around a village including a priory and Saint-Symphorian church, served by the monks of Mont-Saint-Michel. This strategic site was the scene of a fire in 1423 during the Hundred Years War, when the English attacked and partially destroyed the castle.

In 1474 René Fresneau de Créans undertook a major restoration, adding elements of early Renaissance style such as skylights and sill windows. The castle remained inhabited by its lords until 1633, before being left to share, which accelerated its degradation. In 1734 Princess Alexandrine de Bourbon sold it to the Jesuits of the Royal College of La Flèche, who built a body of classical houses there in 1750 to make it a resting place. The Revolution (1792) led to its sale to local families, including the Lambrons of the Piltiers, who kept the 18th century house but destroyed its wings.

In the 19th century, Paul d'Estournelles de Constant bought and restored the castle, preserving medieval vestiges such as the tower-columbier and the porterie. Ranked a historic monument in 1905, the estate today preserves traces of its medieval, Renaissance and classical phases. Its architecture combines a massive Middle Ages tower, a restored castle in the 15th century (with 16th century guns), and a 18th century house. The ditches, fed by the Loir, underline its strategic location.

Among the remarkable elements, the tower-colombier illustrates the reuse of defensive structures: its medieval archeries were preserved, while its interior was divided into two levels in the 15th century. The châtelet, restored at the beginning of the 20th century by architect Henri Laffillé, has a mostly modern carved decoration, with the exception of potentially medieval mascarons. The site, still owned by the descendants of Paul d'Estournelles of Constant, bears witness to nearly nine centuries of history, between conflicts, architectural adaptations and heritage preservation.

External links