Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château de Lucéram dans les Alpes-Maritimes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château

Château de Lucéram

    2 Rue des Grottes
    06440 Lucéram
Ownership of the municipality
Château de Lucéram
Château de Lucéram
Château de Lucéram
Château de Lucéram
Château de Lucéram
Château de Lucéram
Château de Lucéram
Château de Lucéram
Château de Lucéram
Château de Lucéram
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Âge du Fer
Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
500 av. J.-C.
400 av. J.-C.
0
1000
1100
1200
1300
1900
2000
Ve siècle av. J.-C.
Installation of Ligures
1057
First written entry
1108
Site Fortification
1156
Citation of the castle
28 mars 1258
Treaty of Luceram
1272
Assignment to Provence
1388
Nice to Savoie edition
1395
New ramparts
28 février 1927
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chateau (rests): registration by order of 28 February 1927

Key figures

Charles Ier d'Anjou - Count of Provence (1246) Buyer of Vintimille fiefs
Romée de Villeneuve - Provencal Counsellor Combating Genoese influence
Boniface et Georges de Vintimille - Counts of Vintimille Land sellers to Charles I
Jeanne Ire de Naples - Queen of Naples Granted communal clearance
Antoine de Castello - Notary of Lucéram Recognise Charles de Duras in 1383
Amédée VII de Savoie - Count of Savoy Beneficiary of the Nice edition

Origin and history

The bulwark of Lucéram, often called "Château", is what remains of medieval fortifications built between the 12th and 13th centuries on a promontory near St John's church. This strategic site, controlling the way between La Turbie and the valley of Vesubia, was initially occupied by the Ligures (Vth century BC), then by the Romans, as evidenced by coins and pottery discovered there. Lucéram, mentioned for the first time in 1057 under the name Lucerammo, became a fortified place in 1108, with a castle named since 1156.

In the 13th century, the county of Provence, led by Charles I of Anjou (from 1246 onwards), strengthened its grip on the region. The Treaty of Luceram, signed on 28 March 1258, seals the sale of the fiefs of Breil and Saorge by the Counts of Vintimille to Charles I. In 1272, the latter ceded their rights to Lucéram, marking the construction of a seigneurial house (a door remaining in the church of Sainte-Marguerite). The commune then obtained a charter of franchises, forming with Peille and Utelle an independent republican confederation.

The geostrategic position of Lucéram, on the salt road between Nice and Piedmont, led to the construction of new ramparts in the 14th century, authorized in 1395 by the Savoyard governor. These defences, including a 15-metre tower and three doors (including the Iera Gate, restored in 1925), were designed to protect the population from local conflicts, such as the Lucéram-Tende guerrilla (1318-1328). In 1388, despite the protests of Lucéram, Levens and Utelle, the deed of Nice à la Savoie incorporated the region into the "New Lands of Provence".

The rampart, inscribed in the historic monuments in 1927, illustrates the tensions between Counts of Provence, Republic of Genoa and House of Savoie for the control of the Alpes-Maritimes. Its architecture combines Provencal and Savoyard influences, reflecting the political changes between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Today's remains, such as the Moorish-style doorway, recall this turbulent history of salt trade and territorial rivalries.

The excavations and written sources (charts, treatises) confirm the military and administrative importance of Lucéram, the seat of a general consilium of the viguria of Vintimille in 1383. Its role in the conflicts between Anjou and Duras, and its disputed attachment to Savoie (1388-1391), make it a symbol of the struggles for communal autonomy in eastern Provence.

External links