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Château de la Bâtisse à Chanonat dans le Puy-de-Dôme

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château

Château de la Bâtisse

    Château de la Bâtisse
    63450 Chanonat
Private property
Château de la Bâtisse
Château de la Bâtisse
Château de la Bâtisse
Crédit photo : Romary - 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
1308
First entry
XIVe siècle
Defensive expansion
1569
Abandonment of the castle
1622
Purchase by Claude Roussel
1633
Modification of towers
1693
Transformation
1970 et 1997
Historical Monuments
mars 2021
Change of owners
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs, as well as the large living room on the ground floor with its decoration of woodwork and stucco (cad. L 134): classification by decree of 16 June 1970 - Gardens with terraces, stairs, greenhouse, pavilions, fountains, ponds, beds, alleyways, labyrinth, cooler and waterfalls (see ZE 103, 104): by order of 17 July 1997

Key figures

Gérard d'Aultier - First known owner Cook in 1308.
Famille de La Volpilhière - Owners until 1569 Last member committed suicide.
Claude Roussel - Acquirer in 1622 Restore the towers after Richelieu.
Jean Girard (Girard de Chasteauneuf) - Secretary of the Roy, owner in 1693 Turn the castle into a home.
Famille Arnoux de Maison Rouge - Former owner (until 2017) Joined Girard's descendants.
Jean-Yves Berthon et Vincent Salesse - Owners since 2021 Buyers of the estate.

Origin and history

The château de la Bâtisse, mentioned in 1308, was initially a 13th century defence tower integrated into the protective system of Clermont-Ferrand. In the 14th century, three additional towers were added and connected by buildings, forming a castle. The Auzon valley was then used as a secure route, with the building controlling the low accesses, while the Crest castle dominated the heights.

In the 17th century the cardinal of Richelieu ordered the partial destruction of the fortifications of Auvergne: the walls of the enclosure and a tower of the building were razed in 1622, and the mâchicoulis of the remaining towers destroyed. Claude Roussel, acquirer in 1622, coiffaed the lantern cap towers around 1633. In 1693 Jean Girard (now Girard de Chasteauneuf), Secretary of the Roy, transformed the castle into an 18th-century marina, adding a French garden to terraces.

The gardens, covering 9 hectares, were designed in the style of André Le Nôtre and are now classified as remarkable gardens. Powered by an ingenious hydraulic system capturing water from the Auzon, they integrate basins, waterfalls and a maze. The estate, along the 1,800 m river, is the only water garden in the Central Massif. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1970 (façades, roofs, living room) and 1997 (gardens), the castle belonged to the families of La Volpilhière (until 1569), Roussel, Girard de Chasteauneuf, then to the Arnoux de Maison Rouge until 2021.

Left behind for 60 years after the suicide of the last of La Volpilhière in 1569, the seigneury was bought by Claude Roussel in 1622. Jean Girard's descendants joined the Arnoux family of Maison Rouge, the owner until March 2021, when Jean-Yves Berthon and Vincent Salesse became the new buyers. The castle thus illustrates a major architectural evolution, from the Middle Ages to the modern era, while preserving original defensive elements.

A plan of the eighteenth century, still preserved in the castle, attests to the original landscape arrangements: terraces, coolers, and waterfalls adapted to the turbulent relief. The protected elements include the facades, the woodwork of the large living room, as well as all the gardens with their structures (pavillons, fountains, alleys). The site remains an exceptional testimony of the art of gardens in Auvergne and the adaptation of castles to residential uses under the Ancien Régime.

External links