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Château de la Motte à Mazerier dans l'Allier

Allier

Château de la Motte


    03800 Mazerier

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Xe siècle
Presumed origin of the castral moth
XIVe siècle
Construction of the strong house
1631
Sale to Trellet
1774
Marriage of Marie Françoise Barton
1794
Revolutionary destructions
1844
Sale to Auguste Gaubert
19 avril 2021
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The Château de la Motte in its entirety, with its park and fences, its access driveway and its communes, located 8 chemin des Grands-Champs, on plot No.55, appearing in the cadastre section AB: inscription by order of 19 April 2021

Key figures

Antoine Coëffier de Ruzé d'Effiat - Marshal of France An illustrious member of the Coëffier family.
Gaspard Amable de La Porte d'Issertieux - Last lord before 1789 Owner during the Revolution.
Amador de La Porte - Former Grenadier of the Imperial Guard Sell the castle in 1844.
Auguste Gaubert - Registrar and judge in Riom Transforms the castle in the 19th century.
Honoré Vianne - Architect in Gannat Designs neogothic extensions.
Antoine Cariol - Revolutionary Commissioner Ordone destruction in 1794.

Origin and history

The Château de la Motte-Mazerier, located in Mazerier near Gannat in Allier, finds its origins in the 10th century with a primitive castral motte. The current remains, including the partial moat, date from the 14th century, when the strong house still visible was built. This square building, flanked by a round staircase tower, illustrates the bourbonese defensive architecture of the period, with its three levels and roof in the pavilion. The seigneury, often transmitted between families, passed in particular to the Coëffier in the sixteenth century, linked to the local nobility like Antoine Coëffier de Ruzé d'Effiat, Marshal of France.

In the 18th century, the castle belonged to Jean Baptiste François Barton de Montbas, whose daughter, Marie Françoise, brought in dowry to Gaspard Amable de La Porte d'Issertieux in 1774. The latter, the last lord before the Revolution, escaped confiscation thanks to his non-migration. During the Terror, commissioner Antoine Cariol had the tower's height destroyed and the shields staked (1794), but the property remained in the family. In the 19th century, the son of Gaspard, Amador de La Porte, a former grenadier of the Imperial Guard who had become blind, sold the castle in 1844 before being exiled to Algiers.

The purchaser, Auguste Gaubert, clerk and then judge in Riom, undertook major transformations around 1852: replacing tiles with slates, adding a neo-Gothic wing with an octagonal turret, and modifying openings. The architect Honoré Vianne de Gannat designed this partially realized project, however preserving the medieval character of the house. The castle, which has remained in the descendants of the Grindelle since 1906, was listed as historical monuments in 2021 for its whole (logis, park, commons and driveway).

Architecturally, the castle is distinguished by its imposing elevation on a small plane, typical of the strong Bourbon houses. The main façade, framed by 16th-century sill bays, preserves traces of revolutionary changes (filled frames, demolished towers). Recent restorations have restored the conical roof of the stair tower and partly the ancient appearance of the courtyard. The park, lined with walls, houses commons ( stables, barn) and a brick edicle, testimonies of the 19th century developments.

The seigneury of the Motte, created in the 14th century, frequently changed hands, reflecting the alliances and transactions of the local nobility. The Coëffier, the influential family of Bourbonnais, left their mark before the Savaron and the Trellet in the 17th century. The 19th century marked a turning point with the arrival of the Gauberts, who modernized the castle while respecting its medieval heritage. Today, the site, still private, embodies nearly a thousand years of history, from feudal origins to contemporary heritage protections.

External links