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Château de Jean d'Heurs à Lisle-en-Rigault dans la Meuse

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Meuse

Château de Jean d'Heurs

    Le Château
    55000 Lisle-en-Rigault
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Château de Jean dHeurs
Crédit photo : DrCortez - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1800
1900
2000
vers 1140
Foundation of the Abbey
1808
Transformation into a castle
1972
First protections
1991
Park registration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Headroom with its woodwork; north gate of the vestibule and north gate of the staircase in the east wing; ramp of the castle's stairway of honor (cad. A 38): by order of 21 December 1972; Galleries of the cloister, access gallery to cells; former kitchen of the castle (cad. A 38): registration by order of 21 December 1972; Facades and roofs of the castle (Box A 38): classification by decree of 12 June 1989; Jeand'Heurs Park, as well as the buildings it contains (cad. A 26, 28 to 30, 32, 34 to 36, 39, 40, 42 to 45, 47, 66, 70 to 72, 383, 416, 515, 521 to 524, 526, 527, 529, 531, 533, 758 to 762, 838, 841, 844, 870 to 878): registration by order of 22 October 1991

Key figures

Maréchal Oudinot - Owner and sponsor Transforming the abbey into a castle in 1808.
Nicolas Pierson - Architect assigned Master of work mentioned without details.

Origin and history

The château of Jean d'Heurs was founded in a pre-demonstrated abbey founded around 1140, whose buildings were thoroughly renovated at the beginning of the 19th century. In 1808, Marshal Oudinot, Duke of Reggio and Napoleonic figure, acquired the site and transformed it into a Louis XV style castle, using the white stone of Savonnières. This project is part of the reallocation of ecclesiastical property after the Revolution, mixing religious heritage and aristocratic ambition.

The surrounding park, representative of the 19th-century Lorrain gardens, is built around the Saulx and includes factories (orangery, stables converted to equestrian center) typical of the First Empire. These elements, as well as the galleries of the cloister and the medieval capitular hall, testify to the superposition of the epochs. The castle also illustrates the influence of Empire Marshals in reconfiguring the rural heritage, combining military utility (Oudinot resided there) and landscape aesthetics.

Several protection campaigns marked its recent history: partial classification in 1972 (capitular room, stair ramp), followed by registration of the park and its outbuildings in 1991. These measures highlight the hybrid architectural value of the site, between monastic heritage and imperial creation. The architect Nicolas Pierson is mentioned as a masterpiece, although his exact role remains to be specified in the available sources.

Today, the castle of Jean d'Heurs remains a Lorrain example of heritage conversion, where religious memory, Napoleonic fascists and contemporary management (private property) intersect. Its park, with its tree alignments and water games, retains a structure close to its 19th century design, despite modern uses such as horse riding.

External links