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Château de Lacroix-Falgarde en Haute-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Haute-Garonne

Château de Lacroix-Falgarde

    245 Allée Louis Delafage
    31120 Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Château de Lacroix-Falgarde
Crédit photo : Raphael Isla - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1574
Construction begins
1580
Completion of work
1680
Change of seigneury
1793
Arrest of Jean Bruno Martin Lacroix
20 septembre 1958
Historical Monument
XXe siècle
Conversion into apartments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle (cad. A 226): classification by order of 20 September 1958

Key figures

François Delpuech - Lord and sponsor Initiator of construction in 1574.
Dominique Bachelier - Presumed craftsman Probable author of the moulded chimney.
Jean Bruno Martin Lacroix - Revolutionary Lord Arrested in 1793, released by a petition.
Antoine Labit - Last notable owner Toulouse entrepreneur, owner late 19th century.
Raymon Huffernec et Raymond de Vaulx - Master masons Construction managers (1574-1580).

Origin and history

The castle of Lacroix-Falgarde, located in the commune of the same name in Haute-Garonne, was built from 1574 on under the impulse of François Delpuech, local lord and actor of economic development linked to pastel. The works, entrusted to the master masons Raymon Huffernec and Raymond de Vaulx, were completed in 1580, giving birth to a brick building typical of Toulouse architecture, adorned with a chimney attributed to Dominique Bachelier. The castle, surrounded by moats and with bastioned pavilions pierced by murderers, embodied both a seigneurial residence and a symbol of power in the Toulouse Country, a fertile region bordered by the Garonne and Ariège.

Ranked Historic Monument in 1958 for its heritage value, the castle reflects the social and political transformations of the region. Passed from the hands of the Delpuech — family ruined in the 17th century — to the Tournemire, then to the Martin Lacroix, it became the seat of a seigneury marked by figures such as Jean Bruno Martin Lacroix, arrested under the Revolution for his democratic ideas, or Marie Xavier Léopold, mayor of the commune in the 19th century. The building, now divided into private apartments, preserves defensive elements and interior decorations (French ceilings, ground fireplaces), testimonies of its fascinating past.

The castle is part of a territory marked by the turbulent history of Lacroix-Falgarde, a village born from the fusion of two hamlets, Falgarde and Lacroix, mentioned in 1254. The town, crossed by Ariège and close to Toulouse, was a strategic crossing, as evidenced by the stop of the Black Prince in 1355 during his ride. The castle, the nerve centre of the seigneury, also illustrates the local challenges, such as the recurrent floods of Ariège — which motivated the construction of an iron bridge in 1903 — or the conflicts of the Resistance during the Second World War, where inhabitants such as François Thomas and Julien Loupiac lost their lives.

The architecture of the castle, organised around a rectangular courtyard with a pilaster-framed portal and a house body adorned with a horse-iron perron, combines Renaissance influences and local traditions. The commons, bordered by arcades, and carved sill windows underline its prestige. Inside, some rooms retain their original décor, while the whole, initially surrounded by moat, partially lost its defensive functions over the centuries. The site, today private, remains an emblem of the Occitan heritage, linked to the economic (pastel), social (seigneurie) and military history (wars of Religion, Resistance) of the region.

The posterity of the castle is also linked to local figures such as Abbé Olivier, who built the present church of Lacroix-Falgarde in the 19th century, or Antoine Labit, owner of the castle at the end of the 19th century and founder of the first Toulouse department store, La Maison universelle. These links between architectural heritage and social history illustrate the central place of the castle in collective memory, between medieval heritage, modern transformations and contemporary issues of preservation.

External links