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Château de Lagarde in Ariège dans l'Ariège

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Ariège

Château de Lagarde in Ariège

    Chemin du Parterre
    09500 Lagarde
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Château de Lagarde dans lAriège
Crédit photo : BastienM - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1063
Construction of guard tower
1212
Donation to Guy I of Lévis
XIVe siècle
Construction of the square castle
1526
Renaissance staircase
XVIIe siècle
Transformation into a palace
1794
Revolutionary Demolition
1914
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château (ruines) (Case AD 14, 15, 16 to 23, 462, 627) : classification by official journal of 18 April 1914

Key figures

Ramire Ier d’Aragon - King of Aragon Founded the guard tower in 1063.
Guy Ier de Lévis - Lord and cross Received Lagarde in 1212 from Philippe Auguste.
Jean V de Lévis-Mirepoix - Senechal and Royal Councillor Modernized the castle (XVI century).
Louise de Roquelaure - Patron and widow Turn Lagarde into a Baroque palace.
François-Gaston de Lévis - Last Lord Saved the archives before 1789.

Origin and history

The castle of Lagarde, located in Ariège, finds its origins in the 11th century with the construction of a guard tower by Ramire I of Aragon. This strategic point in the north of the kingdom became an issue during the Albigois Crusade: in 1212, Philippe Auguste offered to Guy I of Lévis, lieutenant of Simon de Montfort, marking the beginning of the influence of this noble family of Île-de-France. The village of Lagarde emerged around this tower a century later.

In the 14th century, François de Lévis-Mirepoix erected a square castle flanked by four monumental towers on a rocky spur. Fortifications are adapted to military evolutions, with crenelated walls and murderers. The site, initially defensive, then reflects the increasing power of the Lévis, local lords linked to the crown of France.

The 15th to 16th centuries saw John V of Levis-Mirepoix, Seneschal of Carcassonne and adviser to Kings Charles VIII, Louis XII and Francis I, radically modernising the castle. It incorporates Renaissance elements (slide with screws surmounted by a dome in star, flamboyant Gothic chapel) while strengthening the defenses to resist artillery. A second low enclosure, flanked by round towers with casemates, is added, with a dammed earth rampart allowing razing shots.

In the 17th century, Louise de Roquelaure, widow of Alexander de Lévis-Mirepoix, transformed the castle into a "Pyrénées Petit Versailles". It adds four-metre Greco-Roman statues, French-style gardens, a Glaces gallery, and a cooler. The cannons are removed, and a third enclosure with terraces-promenades completes the transformation into a palace of pleasure. These beautifications, inspired by the Loire castles, make Lagarde an Occitan Baroque jewel.

The French Revolution marked a tragic turning point: the castle was looted in 1794, partially demolished and sold as a national good. His stones serve as a quarry, and the remains become warehouses or stables. Despite its ranking at the Historic Monuments in 1914, it fell into ruins in the 20th century, victim of theft (like the destruction of a section of tower in 1980). Since 1990, voluntary associations (including Per le Castel) have been working on its restoration, revealing the traces of its past.

Today, the site hosts events such as medieval gourmet markets and an annual gathering of reconstructors. The ruins retain remarkable elements: the star vault of the Renaissance staircase, the foundations of the baroque terraces, and the remains of the three successive enclosures. The archives saved by François-Gaston de Lévis (emigrated in 1789) and preserved in Ariège allow to reconstruct his history.

External links