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Château de Cussigny à Corgoloin en Côte-d'or

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Côte-dor

Château de Cussigny

    Château de Cussigny
    21700 Corgoloin
Château de Cussigny
Château de Cussigny
Château de Cussigny
Château de Cussigny
Crédit photo : Sdo216 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1700
1800
1900
2000
1356
First entry
1742
Rebuilding of the castle
1764
Change of ownership
1788
New transmission
début XIXe siècle
Architectural changes
28 décembre 1960
Partial protection
5 juillet 1965
Extension of protection
30 juillet 2023
Fire destruction
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs of the castle excluding the square tower to the south-west which is not old; chapel; dovecoier (cad. E 96, 98): entry by order of 28 December 1960; Cour d'honneur, park to the west on plots E 97 and 98 (Box E 97, 98): inscription by order of 5 July 1965

Key figures

Henri-Bénigne de Saint-Belin - Owner and reconstructor Rebuild the castle around 1742.
Claude Pierre Poulletier de Perrigny - Acquirer in 1764 Owner before the Carrelet de Loisy.
Bénigne Antoine Carrelet de Loisy - Last influential owner Changes the north wing in the 19th century.

Origin and history

The castle of Cussigny, located in Corgoloin (Côte d'Or), is an 18th-century building built around 1742 by Henri-Bénigne de Saint-Belin on the remains of an old strong house mentioned since 1356. This rectangular castle, oriented to the east, was characterized by a central body with pediment flanked by two wings, flat tile roofs decorated with a chronogram "1771", and commons organized around a square courtyard. The facades, roofs (outside a square tower), chapel and dovecote were protected as historical monuments since 1960 and 1965.

The history of the castle is marked by changes of influential owners: past of the families of Cussigny, Nantes, then of Brasey in the 15th century, it was passed on by inheritance to the Saint-Belin until the 18th century. In 1764 Claude Pierre Poulletier de Perrigny became its owner, before Bénigne Antoine Carrelet de Loisy acquired the estate in 1788. The latter removed the north wing and the last corner towers in the early 19th century, thus changing its original appearance.

On July 30, 2023, a fire completely destroyed the castle, destroying the wooden parts and seriously damaging the stone walls. Despite the intervention of forty firefighters, only the dovecote and adjacent communes were spared. The sinister event, when the castle was unoccupied, marked the end of a major architectural heritage of Burgundy-Franche-Comté, already at the heart of local tensions in 2022 because of a controversial holiday village project.

Prior to its destruction, the castle illustrated the Burgundian architecture of the eighteenth century, with its stone bellows, its stone-cut corner chains, and its bays in segmentary arch or full-cintra. The communes, organized in square courtyards, included buildings for agricultural or domestic use, while the dovecote, typical of seigneurial estates, showed the economic importance of the site. The ensemble was representative of the transformations undergone by medieval castles, adapted to the classic cannons under the Old Regime.

External links