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Château de l'Épine à Agonges dans l'Allier

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château Médiéval et Renaissance
Allier

Château de l'Épine

    Les Echardons
    03210 Agonges
Château de lÉpine
Château de lÉpine
Château de lÉpine
Château de lÉpine
Château de lÉpine
Château de lÉpine
Crédit photo : Cedric23a - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1322
First feudal confession
1444
Aveu de Pierre de Saint-Aubin
XVe siècle (2e moitié)
Construction of corner towers
1717
Crime at the castle
5 mars 1992
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The field of Epine, including moat (see Box A 10, 11): registration by order of 5 March 1992

Key figures

Étienne Boutefeu - Lord of Lespines (XIVe s.) First feudal confession known in 1322.
Marguerite Boutefeu - Lady of Lespine (beginning 15th century) Wife of William of Roux, King of Arms.
Pierre de Saint-Aubin - Lord of Epine (XVth century) Detailed view of the estate in 1444.
Gilbert-Charles Legendre - Marquis de Saint-Aubin (XVIIIth century) Ruined by the law system.

Origin and history

The Château de l'Épine, located in Agonges in the Allier, is a 15th century fortified estate, representative of the fortified Bourbon farms. Initially a simple castral motte in the 13th century, it was reinforced by moats and towers of the 15th century, in response to the instability of the Hundred Years War. Its square plan, surrounded by moat still in water, includes a house, commons (grange, stables), and a chapel in the southwest tower. The whole, classified as Historical Monument in 1992, illustrates the evolution of rural fortresses into defensive castles.

The first feudal confessions date back to 1322, when Étienne Boutefeu, seigneur of Lespine, paid tribute to the estate. The seigneury then passed into the hands of the Boutefeu, then by alliance to the Saint-Aubin in the 15th century, who exercised complete seigneurial justice (high, medium, low). In 1444, Pierre de Saint-Aubin described an "ostel, fortress and crazed" with dovecote, mills, and rights of use in the forest of Bagnolet. The castle, with a drawbridge and murderers, symbolizes the local feudal power, combining residential, agricultural and judicial functions.

In the 17th century, the family of Saint-Aubin retained the Épine until its forced sale in 1749-1751, following the bankruptcy of the Marquis Gilbert-Charles Legendre, ruined by the law system. The estate, strengthened in 1685, became a farm: in 1717 a crime was committed there (a farmer's death), and in 1775 it was managed by Pierre Daumin. The architecture, preserved, reveals defensive (tours, moats) and economical (moulins, barns), typical of Bourbon seigneuries.

The oldest southwest tower houses a vaulted chapel on the ground floor and a dovecote upstairs, accessible by a spiral staircase. Its two-level structure, including a short ray wheel, is remarkable. The walls, pierced by bolts (terranean pigeon nests), attest to its mixed use: worship, storage, and symbol of seigneurial prestige. The communes, still intact, retain their original structures and arrangements, offering a rare testimony of medieval rural life.

Ranked a Historic Monument in 1992, the Château de l'Epine embodies the transition between a strong house and a residential castle. Its history, marked by matrimonial alliances (Boutefeu, Saint-Aubin, Legendre) and economic crises (bankroute of 1720), reflects the changes of the Bourbon nobility. Today, its square plan, moats and agricultural buildings make it a unique example of a preserved fortified estate, illustrating both defensive architecture and seigneurial life of the 15th-15th centuries.

External links