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Château de la Hunaudaye à Plédéliac en Côtes-d'Armor

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Côtes-dArmor

Château de la Hunaudaye

    D28A 
    22270 Plédéliac
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Château de la Hunaudaye
Crédit photo : MFSG - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1220
Initial construction
1367-1474
Reconstruction after destruction
1487
Erection in barony
1793
Revolutionary destruction
1922
Historical monument classification
2008
Transfer to the Departmental Council
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle (Box ZN 44): classification by decree of 18 February 1922 - The parcel called Les Glacis, surrounding the castle: classification by decree of 27 November 1930

Key figures

Pierre de Dreux - Duke of Brittany Initial sponsor of the castle.
Olivier Tournemine - Lord and builder First owner and builder.
François Tournemine - Baron de la Hunaudaye Elevation in barony in 1487.
Jeanne de la Motte-Vaucler - Owner in the 17th century Wife of Sébastien de Rosmadec.
Joseph de Talhouët - Last owner before 1789 Marquis and future mayor of Rennes.

Origin and history

The château de la Hunaudaye, located in Plédéliac in the Côtes d'Armor, finds its origins in the 13th century under the impulse of Pierre de Dreux, Duke of Brittany. Originally built to monitor the border between the Penthièvre and the Poudouvre, it was entrusted to Olivier Tournemine, who erected a fortress there in 1220. This first castle, destroyed during the War of Succession of Brittany (1341-1364), was rebuilt between 1367 and 1474 by the Tournemine, family faithful to the Penthièvre and the Dukes of Brittany. The new structure, of pentagonal plan with five towers, incorporates military innovations of the time.

In the 15th century, the Hunaudaye estate became a baronie in recognition of the services rendered by François Tournemine during the Mad War. The castle, spared by the troubles of the League (1592-1598), experienced a period of decline from the seventeenth century. After the extinction of the lineage of the Tournemines, it passes into the hands of families such as the Rosmadecs and the Rieux, who bring to it minor arrangements, such as a staircase of apparate. In 1793, during the Revolution, he was burned by Lamballe revolutionaries, fearing that he would serve as a refuge for the Chouans.

Ranked a historic monument in 1922, the castle was bought by the state in 1930 after the collapse of some structures. Urgent restoration campaigns were carried out in the 1930s and 1950s, followed by security in the 1960s. Since 1977, the association of the château de la Hunaudaye has been responsible for its management and development, with recent works (2005-2008) to facilitate its opening to the public. Today, the site offers guided tours, exhibitions and educational activities.

Archaeological excavations carried out between 1978 and 2002 suggest that the present castle is based on an old castral mound, perhaps occupied from the Iron Age. An archeobotanic study in 2004 revealed the evolution of the surrounding landscape from dense forest to flax and hemp crops in the Middle Ages, then to grasslands in the modern era. The Hunaudaye forest, formerly divided between the Tournemine and the Abbey of Saint-Aubin des Bois, is now a state forest classified as ZNIEFF.

The castle is surrounded by local legends, such as that of the "buffalo", a ghost whose melancholy rale haunts the place. His story is also linked to works of fiction, such as the novel Le Gerfaut des hautes by Juliette Benzoni, which features a fictional heir to the Tournemine. Since 2008, the castle has been owned by the Conseil départemental des Côtes-d的Armor, which continues its preservation and cultural animation.

External links