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Castle of Ganac dans l'Ariège

Ariège

Castle of Ganac

    4 Le Château
    09000 Ganac

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
23 septembre 1792
Pillows during the Revolution
7 avril 1807
Death of Pierre d-Hautpoul
1808
Sale to Jean Ruffié
20 mai 1847
Auction
1868
Purchase by Becq family
années 2000
Roof collapse
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Pierre Marie Gabriel Hyacinthe d’Hautpoul - Last Lord of Ganac Emigrated during the Revolution, died in 1807.
Jean Ruffié - Post-revolutionary acquirer Buy the castle in 1808 from the heirs of Hautpoul.
Amant Elisée Becq - Prefect and Owner Died to the castle in 1923, Commander Légion d'honneur.

Origin and history

The castle of Ganac is located in Barguillière, in the municipality of the same name, in the department of Ariège (Occitanie). Located northeast of the village, on the left bank of Ganac Creek, it is accessible by a communal road. Only 4 km from Foix, this castle is today a private property not open to the public. Its architecture combines parts in ruins (the roof collapsed around the 2000s) and elements restored in the 19th and 20th centuries, such as sinks installed in the rooms and a central heating system.

During the French Revolution, the castle of Ganac was looted in September 1792, in a context of violence against the symbols of the Ancien Régime. An armed crowd, accompanied by the national guard, attacked several castles in the area, including the one in Ganac. Furniture, wood, tiles and other materials are carried away. The last seigneur of the place, Pierre Marie Gabriel Hyacinthe d'Hautpoul, emigrated during the Revolution and died in Toulouse in 1807. His heirs then sold the estate to Jean Ruffié in 1808.

In the 19th century, the castle changed hands several times. Sold at auction in 1847 after the death of Ruffié, it was acquired in 1868 by the Becq family known as Lapanton. Among its members, Amant Elisha Becq (1861–1923), Prefect and Commander of the Legion of Honor, lived there until his death. The castle then passed between the Nat families (from 1924), Rouan (1951), then to Monsieur Lagarde, farmer, current owner.

Architecturally, the castle of Ganac illustrates the successive transformations of a seigneurial residence. While part of the building was restored in the 19th century to modernise comfort (basin installation and central heating), the gradual abandonment led to the degradation of some structures, such as the collapse of the roof in the early 2000s. Despite its state, it remains a testimony of the historical and social upheavals of Ariège.

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