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Château de La Palice dans l'Allier

Allier

Château de La Palice

    4 Rue de la Liberté
    03120 Lapalisse

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
XIIe siècle
Initial construction
1452
Reception of Charles VII
1520
Renaissance Logis
17 octobre 1548
Visit to Henri II
Fin XVe siècle
Gothic reconstruction
1933
Monumental ranking
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Jacques Ier de Chabannes - Sénéchal de Toulouse Reconstructs the Gothic chapel (15th century)
Jacques II de Chabannes - Marshal of France Sponsor of the Renaissance house (1520)
Marie de Melun - Marshal's widow Founded the marble mausoleum (1530)
Charles VII - King of France Stayed at the castle in 1452
Henri II - King of France Visited the castle in 1548
Comte de Choulot - Landscape Redessina the park in the 19th century

Origin and history

The castle of La Palice, built in the 12th century as a stronghold, was profoundly transformed by the family of Chabannes between the 15th and 16th centuries. Located on a hill overlooking the Besbre in Lapalisse (Allier), it controlled a strategic route between the Duchy of Burgundy and the Kingdom of France. Its medieval architecture, including dungeon and hurdles, was partially replaced by a Renaissance house in polychrome bricks under James II of Chabannes, Marshal of France.

In the 15th century, Jacques I de Chabannes, senechal of Toulouse, made the castle a royal reception place, welcoming Charles VII in 1452. The chapel of Saint-Léger, rebuilt in Gothic style at the end of the 15th century, housed the laymen of Jacques I and his wife, who had now disappeared. The castle became a symbol of power with Italian coffered ceilings and a hexagonal staircase tower, characteristic of the Bourbon Renaissance.

In the 16th century, James II of Chabannes, married to Mary of Melun, had a mausoleum erected in Carrara marble, destroyed during the Revolution. The castle welcomed Henry II and Catherine de Medici in 1548. Passed into the hands of La Guiche in the 17th century, it was partially looted and transformed into a court after the Revolution. Ranked a historic monument in 1933, it preserves medieval defensive elements and exceptional Renaissance decorations.

The park, redesigned in the 19th century by the Count of Choulot, completes this historical ensemble. The stables and the chapel, classified, bear witness to its seigneurial past. The castle, restored in the 19th century, remains a major example of architectural evolution between the Middle Ages and Renaissance in Bourbonnais.

Among the illustrious visitors are Charles VII, Louis XI, Francis I, and Henry IV, highlighting his political importance. The painted ceilings, such as the "Doré Salon", inspired by Italian models, and the tapestries of the Neuf Preux (now in Langeais) illustrate its cultural influence.

The etymological legend binds its name to the palissade (palitia in Latin) originally marking the site. The castle, symbol of the struggles between Bourguignons and French, also embodies the alliance between military art and courteous refinement, typical of the Bourbon nobility.

External links