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Château de Dieulouard en Meurthe-et-Moselle

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Meurthe-et-Moselle

Château de Dieulouard

    5 Rue de la Fontaine
    54380 Dieulouard
Château de Dieulouard
Château de Dieulouard
Château de Dieulouard
Château de Dieulouard
Crédit photo : Avvincent - 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
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
997
Initial construction
1028
First written entry
XIVe siècle
High strength
1660
Partial dismantling
1927
Registration MH
années 1970
Rehabilitation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle (rests) (Box H 313): inscription by order of 19 January 1927

Key figures

Adalbéron II - Bishop of Metz (984–1005) Founded the castle in 997.
Conrad II le Salique - German Emperor (1024–1039) Place the castle in 1028.
Charles le Téméraire - Duke of Burgundy (1467–1477) Seated the fortress in the 15th century.

Origin and history

The castle of Dieulouard, called in the Middle Ages "Deus lou wart" ("God guard him" in Lorrain), was erected around 997 by Adalberon II, bishop of Metz, to house the inhabitants of a new village established near the ruins of Scarpone, an ancient Gallo-Roman city destroyed by Attila in the fifth century. This strategic site, crossed by the Roman way Lyon-Trèves, already housed a late castrum (fourth century), forerunner of the medieval fortress. The castle, mentioned for the first time in 1028 in letters patent of Emperor Conrad II the Salica, became a key post to control the river trade on the Moselle and serve as a provost ephemeral in Lorene land.

Over the centuries, the fortress bore many sieges and destructions, notably by the Messins (12th century), Charles the Temerary (15th century), and the Huguenots. In the 14th century, he re-constructed on several occasions an imposing defensive structure: a straight facade of 100 meters, a polygonal enclosure flanked by seven circular towers and a square tower, crenellated walls of 20 meters high, and a rocking bridge. These developments, partially redesigned in the 16th century, made it a major stronghold, integrated into the urban fabric with houses attached to its ramparts.

In 1660, the castle was "capped" and made harmless, before being sold as a national good during the Revolution. Divided into lots, it housed about fifteen families who broke new openings and built gardens. Its rehabilitation began in the 1970s with the restoration of the episcopal home and the creation of a Gallo-Roman museum (Musée des Amis du Vieux Pays), exhibiting artifacts of Scarpone — such as Milestones of the Emperors Hadrian and Postumus — and a collection of Renaissance glasses. Today, the monument, inscribed in the Historical Monuments since 1927, bears witness to nearly a thousand years of history, from the Gallo-Roman origins to its role as episcopal sentinel in Lorraine.

The site is part of a broader historical context: heir to the ancient Scarpona, it illustrates the transition between late antiquity and the Middle Ages, marked by the barbaric invasions (Alamans, Huns) and the recomposition of local power around bishops. The fortress was also an issue in the conflicts between Messins, Counts of Vaudémont, and Duchy of Lorraine, reflecting the political and religious tensions of the region until the modern era.

External links