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Château de la Seilleraye à Carquefou en Loire-Atlantique

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Loire-Atlantique

Château de la Seilleraye

    Chemin de Gaubert
    44470 Carquefou
Private property; owned by a regional public institution
Château de la Seilleraye
Château de la Seilleraye
Château de la Seilleraye
Château de la Seilleraye
Château de la Seilleraye
Château de la Seilleraye
Crédit photo : Remy TENEN - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1671
Construction of the castle
24 septembre 1675
Mention by Madame de Sévigné
1730
Completion of work
après 1730
Completion of work
1816
Garden Redessin
1833
Glass of the chapel
Années 1990
Rediscovered paintings
années 1990
Rediscovered paintings
30 décembre 1994
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle with its communes, the gate and the gate (Box D 339, 1234): classification by decree of 30 December 1994; Park of the castle, with its factories (limited on the plan annexed to the decree, cad. D 304, 338-341, 346-348, 438, 680, 679, 1129, 1130, 1230, 1231, 1233): registration by order of 30 December 1994

Key figures

Guillaume d'Harouys - Treasurer of the States of Brittany Commander of the castle in 1671.
Delahaye - Parisian architect Designer of the castle in 1671.
Jean-Baptiste de Becdelièvre - Advocate-General and President Owner after the Harouys family.
Madame de Sévigné - Famous epistolary Called the castle in 1675.
Berthault - Landscape Redessina the park around 1816.
André Jallais - Dutch businessman Buyer before the German occupation.
Guillaume d'Harouys de La Seilleraye - Treasurer of the States of Brittany Commander of the castle in 1671.
André de Cassin de Kainlis - Officer and Mayor of Carquefou Owner by covenant in the 19th century.

Origin and history

The Château de la Seilleraye, located in Carquefu in the Loire-Atlantique, is a building built in two major phases: the reconstruction in 1671 by the Parisian architect Delahaye for Guillaume d'Harouys, treasurer of the States of Brittany, and its completion after 1730 under the Marquis of Becdelièvre. This castle, classified as a Historic Monument in 1994 with its commons and park, embodies the legacy of a seigneury linked to influential families in Nantes, such as the Harouys and Becdelièvres, who marked Breton political life in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Prior to the Revolution, the estate belonged to the Harouys family, several of which were mayors of Nantes. Guillaume d'Harouys, sponsor of the present castle, died without a direct heir, and the estate passed to his aunt Louise, wife of Jean-Baptiste de Becdelièvre, prominent figure in the parliament of Brittany. The castle was cited by Madame de Sévigné in 1675, who in his correspondence referred to the difficulties of its construction. The interior decorations, including 18th-century panelling and 17th-century ornamental paintings rediscovered in the 1990s, testify to his artistic evolution.

In the 19th century, the castle changed hands through matrimonial alliances, passing to the families of Courtarvel and then of Solages. The park was redesigned around 1816 by Berthault, while the chapel stained glass, dating back to 1833, completed its heritage. During the Second World War, the castle was occupied by the Germans, then bought by André Jallais, before being considered a hospital — a project finally abandoned. Today, it houses private residences after a rehabilitation that preserves its historical character.

The gardens, classified with their factories, and the outbuildings transformed into houses, illustrate the contemporary adaptation of a heritage rooted in local history. The legal protections of 1994 underline its architectural and landscape value, while recalling its past role as a place of power and aristocratic life in Brittany.

External links