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Château de la Guette en Seine-et-Marne

Seine-et-Marne

Château de la Guette

    La Guette
    77600 Villeneuve-Saint-Denis

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1900
2000
XIIe siècle
Origin of the castle
1307
Owned by Dreux la Guette
1939
Reception of Jewish children
1941
Request by the State
1986
Title of Just Among the Nations
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Dreux la Guette - Room valet of Philippe le Bel Owner in 1307.
Germaine de Rothschild - Owner and patron Welcomed Jewish children in 1939.
Germaine Le Hénaff - Director of National Relief Cacha Jewish children during the war.
Alfred Brauner - Franco-Austrian teacher Responsible for children welcomed in 1939.

Origin and history

Château de la Guette, located in Villeneuve-Saint-Denis in Seine-et-Marne, has its origins in the 12th century. It is mentioned for the first time as property of Dreux la Guette, valet of room of King Philip the Bel in 1307. Over the centuries, he changed his hands several times, notably to John the Great, the king's bastard, and then to influential families such as Davy, Broc, and Passelaigne. These successions reflect its importance as seigneurial property and aristocratic residence.

In the 18th century, the castle was sold to Jacques Passelaigne and his wife, before becoming the property of the Count of Sénélé in the 19th century. In the 1920s, Renée Saffroy took possession of it, and the Rothschild family became its owner. In 1939, after the Night of Cristal, Baroness Germaine de Rothschild welcomed 130 Jewish children orphaned from Germany and Austria, under the direction of Alfred Brauner and a team dedicated to their rehabilitation.

During the Second World War, the castle was requisitioned by the State in 1941 and transformed into a children's house under the aegis of the National Relief, an organization linked to the Vichy regime. Despite this official framework, Germaine Le Henaff, her director, secretly hides Jewish children under false names, in collaboration with the Resistance. His commitment will earn him the title of Just Among the Nations in 1986. After the war, the castle was finally converted into 32 social housing units, marking a transition to a sustainable social vocation.

External links