First fief entries début XVIe siècle (≈ 1604)
Fief de Lavaur attested
XVIIe siècle
Architectural changes
Architectural changes XVIIe siècle (≈ 1750)
Major transformations of the castle
vers 1782
Interior decors
Interior decors vers 1782 (≈ 1782)
Installed canvas and wallpaper
1898
Renovation
Renovation 1898 (≈ 1898)
Redesign of the building
7 décembre 1992
Registration MH
Registration MH 7 décembre 1992 (≈ 1992)
Castle and protected scenery
fin XIXe siècle
Establishment of the park
Establishment of the park fin XIXe siècle (≈ 1995)
Landscape park in English
29 septembre 1995
MH classification
MH classification 29 septembre 1995 (≈ 1995)
Large living room and wallpaper
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Castle, including the following rooms with their decor: first floor: dining room with its painted canvases depicting the adventures of Don Quixote, office with fireplace; Second floor: room at the baldaquin, room at the gypseries (Box ZC 30): inscription by order of 7 December 1992. Large living room with its decoration of wallpapers on the first floor (Box ZC 30): classification by decree of 29 September 1995
Key figures
Moulianeuf - Painter
Author of the paintings of *Don Quixote* (1782)
Coypel - Drafter
Inspiration of the canvases of the castle
Origin and history
The Château de Lavaur, located at the Broc in Puy-de-Dôme, is a medieval fort house that has retained its primitive silhouette. This fief, attested from the beginning of the sixteenth century, was modified in the seventeenth century and then decorated at the end of the eighteenth century. Its woodwork, wallpapers and canvases depicting Don Quixote (circa 1782) bear witness to this fascinating period. The paintings, signed Moulianeuf, are inspired by Coypel's drawings, while the large living room features marouflé wallpapers acquired at the Réveillon manufacture in 1782, decorated with grotesque motifs revisited by 18th-century French art.
The building, rebuilt in 1898, includes a landscaped park planted in English at the end of the 19th century. Ranked Historical Monument in 1992 (for the castle and its interior decorations) and in 1995 (for the large living room and its wallpapers), it illustrates the evolution of a seigneurial residence in aristocratic residence, mixing medieval heritage and beautifications of the Enlightenment.
The protected elements include the dining room with its Don Quixote canvases, an office with its fireplace, a four-bedroom, and a gypsum room. These decorations, combined with architecture, offer a rare testimony of the artistic tastes of the Auvergne nobility between the Middle Ages and the Revolution.
Announcements
Please log in to post a review