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Château de Grandpré dans les Ardennes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Louis XIII

Château de Grandpré

    2-8 Rue des Quatre Frères Tellier
    08250 Grandpré
Private property
Château de Grandpré
Château de Grandpré
Crédit photo : Florent Simonet - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1441
Destruction of the feudal fortress
1618
Completion of the Justice Gate
Fin XVIe – début XVIIe siècle
Construction by the Joyous
1791
Acquisition by Sémonville
1792
General Dumouriez's stay
13 novembre 1834
A devastating fire
1921
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs: by order of 11 April 1921

Key figures

Louis de Joyeuse - Count of Grandpré Initiator of construction late 15th.
Claude de Joyeuse - Rear-grandson of Louis Acheva the Gate of Justice in 1618.
Marquis de Sémonville - Owner and politician The castle was owned from 1791 to 1839.
Général Dumouriez - Revolutionary military Stayed in 1792 before Valmy.
Général Joubert - Military Marriage in 1799 in the castle.
Charles-Louis Huguet de Sémonville - Marquis and politician Owner in 1791, had restored.
Famille Babled - Owners post-1839 Rebuilt the reduced castle.

Origin and history

The Château de Grandpré, located in the Ardennes, was built at the end of the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries by the Joyeuse, Counts of Grandpré. It replaces a feudal fortress destroyed in 1441 for robbery by its garrison. The site, strategic, controlled a key passage of the forest of Argonne, compared to the Thermopyles by General Dumouriez during the preparation of the battle of Valmy. The Justice Tower, dated 1618, is the most remarkable element, combining Louis XIII style and defensive symbols such as bows and scalds.

The original castle was completed by Claude de Joyeuse, whose mausoleum is located in the local church. In 1791 he passed to the Marquis de Sémonville, where he welcomed General Dumouriez in 1792. Damaged by Prussian armies and emigrants, it was restored in 1796. A fire in 1834 destroyed much of the building, sparing the Gate of Justice. Reconstructed by the Babled family, then ravaged during World War I, it was restored in the 1920s with stylistic simplifications. Ranked a historic monument in 1921, it now bears witness to a rare Baroque architecture and a turbulent history.

The gate tower, made of bricks and local stone, features a porch surmounted by a pediment with volutes, framed with torso columns and defensive shoulder straps. The adjacent pavilions, with rare windows and square scalds, reflect a symbolic defensive concern. The dogive arches and the courtyard-side skylights complete this ensemble, the only vestige of the Joyeuse's architectural ambitions.

The site, originally chosen for its strategic role, illustrates the evolution of Renaissance castles towards less fortified but still prestigious residences. Partial destruction in 1834 and successive reconstructions altered its original appearance, reducing the castle to a more modest home after the ravages of wars and fires.

The Joyous, an influential noble family, marked the history of the castle by their architectural patronage. Claude de Joyeuse, in particular, finished the Gate of Justice, a symbol of their power. The Marquis de Sémonville, a political figure surviving several regimes, played a key role there in the 19th century, before historical hazards permanently transformed the site.

Ranked among the historical monuments of the Ardennes, Grandpré Castle today embodies a military, residential and symbolic heritage. Its hybrid architecture, between defense and baroque aesthetics, makes it a rare testimony of local history, between conflicts, reconstructions and adaptations to successive periods.

External links