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Château de Lévaré en Mayenne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de plaisance

Château de Lévaré

    Le Domaine 
    53120 Lévaré
Ownership of a private company

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIe siècle
Feudal origin
1539
Construction of the current castle
1733
Reconstruction of the chapel
1783
Chartrier ranking
1870
Title of Duke of Abrantès
1940-1945
German occupation
1956
Right wing fire
2006
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The alley connecting the castle to the village courtyard, with its slopes and alignment trees; the platform, with its moats and their facilities (support walls, tanks and defensive systems: remains of the old towers, bridge, old drawbridge, gate to the vegetable garden .); facades and roofs of the southwest part of the house; In total: the staircase and the north-east part of the house, the old dungeon and chapel as well as the old vegetable garden, with its fence walls; the facades and roofs of the buildings of communes and the former leak marking the southern corner of the platform (see Box B2 745, 294, 692, 282): registration by order of 30 October 2006

Key figures

Hamelinus Cognonime Livaricus - Feudal Lord First known owner in the 11th century.
Robert de Gorron - Lord of Lévaré Owns the estate at the end of the 11th century.
Jean des Vaux - Builder of the castle Wife *Marie de Lévaré* in 1539.
Pierre Honoré des Vaux - Last notable descendant Death of plague in 1773 to 20 years.
René Augustin Bellot de Gousse - Archivist Classed the Chartrier de Lévaré in 1783.
Maurice Le Ray d'Abrantès - Duke of Abrantès Titled in 1870 by Napoleon III.
M. Héliot - Resistant deported Arrested by the SS during World War II.

Origin and history

The castle of Lévaré came into being in the 11th century, when the feudal site belonged to the family of chivalry Hamelinus Cognonime Livaricus, then to Robert de Gorron, lord of Lévaré and Tannière. At that time, the estate was the domain of Pontmain chestnutry and enjoyed honorary rights in local churches. The title of Baron, then Marquis (from 1650), remains personal to successive lords, without hereditary transmission. The confessions of 1453, 1518 and 1573 document the extent of the properties attached to the seigneury, revealing a complex feudal organization and scattered property.

In 1539 Jean des Vaux married Marie de Lévaré and began the construction of the present castle, marking the beginning of a long line of owners from this family. For more than three centuries, the Vaux occupied the site, making major architectural changes, such as the reconstruction of the chapel in 1733 under the name of Saint-Jean and Saint-Michel. The descriptions of the 18th century evoke an imposing set, with moat, drawbridge (later replaced by a stone bridge), and a characteristic straight line alignment, despite subsequent changes.

In the 18th century, the Marquis de Montecot, whose mother, Olive des Vaux, had married a member of the family, transferred the archives and furniture from the castle to the English Channel. These documents, classified by René Augustin Bellot de Gousse in 1783, form the Chartrier de Lévaré, now partially preserved at the Archives départementales de la Mayenne. This charter offers a valuable insight into seigneurial management and the transformations of the estate before the Revolution.

In the 19th century, the castle changed hands: sold to Mrs.Le Ray after the wedding of Olive des Vaux, he then passed to his son, Maurice Le Ray d'Abrantès, who married Jeanne Junot, granddaughter of General Junot. He obtained the title of Duke of Abrantes in 1870 by Napoleon III, a hereditary title that marked the social climax of the family. Andoche The Ray of Abrantès, Mayor of Lévaré in 1917, continued this line until 1950, despite the trials of the Second World War, during which the castle housed a German command post.

During the Second World War, the castle was the scene of a drama: Mr. Heliot, a resistant and duke's son-in-law, was denounced, arrested by the SS and deported to concentration camps. After 1950, the estate was sold to a merchant of goods, Mr. Lemonnier, before suffering a fire in 1956 partially destroying the right wing. The 16th-century moat, 14 metres wide, was restored in 1960, and rescue works followed under various owners, including Ms. Geneviève Milan (from 1980) and Françoise and Henri-Jean Anglade-Bosc (from 2001), who undertook major renovations to preserve this heritage.

Listed at the Historical Monuments since 2006, the Château de Lévaré preserves remarkable elements: a fragment of medieval stained glass depicting Jesus in front of Herod, defensive moats and vestiges (tours, old drawbridge), as well as a chapel and a closed vegetable garden. Its architecture, although redesigned, reflects the stylistic evolutions of Mayenne, between feudal heritage and adaptations of the 17th and 18th centuries.

External links