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Château de Genoud à Certines dans l'Ain

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château Médiéval et Renaissance

Château de Genoud

    Champ de Genoud
    01240 Certines
Private property
Château de Genoud
Château de Genoud
Château de Genoud
Château de Genoud
Château de Genoud
Château de Genoud
Château de Genoud
Château de Genoud
Crédit photo : Paraphernalia - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
début XIVe siècle
Initial construction
1530
Genost extinct
1608
Sale in Philibert de La Chambre
1624
Award to Hector de Bellet
XVe-XVIe siècles
Reconstruction
1672
Construction of the house
1808
Napoleonic Cadastre
vers 1853
Restoration of the square tower
28 août 2006
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades and roofs of the castle and its outbuildings including the well, its enclosure, its aisle of plane trees and the surface of plots C 102, 329, 335, 489: inscription by order of 28 August 2006

Key figures

Pierre de Genost - Knight and Lord First known owner (1300-1330).
Antoinette de Genost - Last heiress of Genost Extinction of line around 1530.
François de la Cous - Noble owner Acquire the estate in 1587.
Claude de la Cous - Senator de Savoie Sell the castle in 1608.
Philibert de La Chambre - Lord of St. Helena Temporary owner (1608-1624).
Hector de Bellet - Ecuyer and purchaser Get the castle by auction.
Jean Catin - Counsellor in Parliament Owner by marriage (late 17th).
Louis Dupasquier - Architect Intervention during restorations.

Origin and history

Genoud Castle, located in Certines, Ain, is an ancient castle built in the early 14th century. It was rebuilt in the 15th and 16th centuries and later restored. The center of the seigneury of Genost, it originally belonged to the noble family of Genost, quoted from 1300. The current structure preserves medieval elements, such as a square tower raised around 1853, as well as hemicycle communes surrounding the main entrance.

The seigneury of Genost, in all justice, passed into the hands of several families by inheritance or sale. Pierre de Genost, knight, was the first known owner (1300-1330). After the extinction of the line around 1530, the estate fell to François and Claude de la Cous, then to Philibert de La Chambre in 1608. In 1624, Hector de Bellet became the owner by court auction, before the castle passed to the Catin and Espiard de la Cous families by marriage alliances.

The castle, partially listed as historical monuments in 2006, includes protected facades and roofs, as well as a walkway of plane trees and a well. An engraving from the early 19th century revealed its state of degradation at that time, before subsequent restorations. Originally, the ensemble consisted of three towers and two drawbridges, dismantled during the Revolution. The house, dated 1672, preserves an interior of the nineteenth century, marked by the addition of a staircase of access to the tower.

The architect Louis Dupasquier intervened during the 19th century restorations. Today, the castle is distinguished by its green environment and its aisle of poplars leading from the village. The semicircular commons, visible on a cadastre of 1808, always frame the main entrance, showing the stability of its structure since this period.

External links