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Château de l'Isle in Saint-Denis-en-Val dans le Loiret

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Loiret

Château de l'Isle in Saint-Denis-en-Val

    91-171 Rue de l'Isle
    45560 Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Château de lIsle à Saint-Denis-en-Val
Crédit photo : Bourdon Blanc - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1530
Construction begins
1535
Royal Authorization
1560-1572
Active Protestant period
1572
Massacre of Protestants
1866
Partial destruction
13 avril 2023
Total classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The ruins of the Castle of Isle, in total, located rue de l'Isle, with the ground of plot 6, shown in the AC section of the cadastre, as shown in blue on the plan annexed to the decree: classification by decree of 13 April 2023

Key figures

Jacques Groslot - Bailli d'Orléans and Chancellor Commander of the castle in 1530.
Jérôme Groslot - Calvinist Lord Turn the castle into a Protestant refuge.
François Ier - King of France Authorize the drawbridge in 1535.
François II - King of France Death saving Jérôme Groslot in 1560.

Origin and history

The Château de l'Isle, built from 1530 by Jacques Groslot, baili d'Orléans and chancellor of Marguerite de Navarre, rises on Île aux Bourdons, a land isolated during the floods. Authorized by François I to build a drawbridge in 1535, Groslot established a seigneury there reflecting the power of his Orléan tanner family. This castle, during the Groslot hotel in the city centre, embodies Renaissance architecture mixing stone and brick, while becoming a symbol of Protestant influence in the region.

When James died in 1552, his son Jerome, a committed Calvinist, turned the castle into a refuge for the Huguenots during the Wars of Religion. Arrested in 1560 and pardoned in 1571, he organized sermons despite the royal ban. The massacre of Saint Barthélemy in 1572 also struck the castle: Jerome died in Paris, while Protestants were murdered there, marking the decline of Orléan Protestantism. The domain remains a place of theological debates, as in 1620 with reformed pastors.

The castle left the Groslot family in 1751, passing in several hands before being partially attached to Saint-Denis-en-Val in 1829. A devastating flood of the Loire in 1866 destroyed a large part of the already fragile buildings. Ranked a historic monument in 1925 and in total in 2023, the site is now preserved by an association created in 2008, which became its owner in 2010. The ruins, stabilized, bear witness to this heritage linked to the religious and architectural history of the Loire Valley.

Located on the south bank of the Loire, in the east of the Orléanese agglomeration, the castle is situated within the perimeter of the Loire Valley classified at UNESCO. Accessible via the Loire by bike, it illustrates the Groslot's dual heritage: seigneurial power and reformed commitment. Its architecture, though ruined, retains traces of its defensive and residential role, while its history reflects the denominational tensions of the sixteenth century.

External links