Foundation of the Priory IXe siècle (≈ 950)
Benedictine priory dependent on Ambronay.
1176
First bequests attested
First bequests attested 1176 (≈ 1176)
Economic prosperity of the priory.
XIIe siècle
Monastic peak
Monastic peak XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Construction gallery cloister and church.
1653
Temporary withdrawal
Temporary withdrawal 1653 (≈ 1653)
Decline before deletion.
1752
Sale and processing
Sale and processing 1752 (≈ 1752)
Become a master house.
30 décembre 1997
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 30 décembre 1997 (≈ 1997)
Protection of all remains.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Former priory in full, ground and built (AH 1-4, 6-11): registration by order of 30 December 1997
Key figures
Saint Barnard - Abbé d'Ambronay then bishop
Probable founder owner of the priory.
Jacquette (de Ronchevol ?) - Priory in 1267
Recognition of suzeraineté in Ambronay.
Maude de Bullioud - Prioress (1515–1532)
Sponsor of the primary residence.
Origin and history
The Château de La Bruyère has its origins in a Benedictine priory founded in the 9th century, dependent on the Abbey of Ambrosnay and the chapter of Lyon. The oldest remains date back to the 12th century, including a gallery of Romanesque cloisters and elements of the prioral church. The priory, flourishing in the 11th–12th centuries, had important legacies as early as 1176 and was led by priories attested as early as 1276. Its decline began in the seventeenth to eighteenth centuries, with a temporary abandonment in 1653 and a definitive sale in 1752.
The site is then transformed into a master house called La Bruyère Castle, preserving medieval structures such as the prioral house (XVth–XVIth centuries) and the porch of the chapel Saint-Roch (XIIIth century). The west gallery of the novel cloister, the foothills, and the partial crypt testify to its monastic past. Ranked as a Historic Monument in 1997, the ensemble also includes 18th century (stone staircase, terraces) and 19th century (remise, stable), combining religious heritage and residential architecture.
The buildings, organized in a U-shaped plan, surround a courtyard with an old cloister surmounted by a gallery. The main body, at double depth, overlooks a terrace overlooking the Saône, while the wings sheltered services and extensions. The priory, originally founded in a property of Saint Barnard (abbé d-Ambrosnay and bishop of Romans), was probably created by a relative of the latter. Its history reflects the mutations of a monastic site in aristocratic residence, marked by phases of prosperity (XII century) and decline (XVIII century).
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