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Lunegarde Castle dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Lot

Lunegarde Castle

    Le Bourg
    46240 Lunegarde
Private property
Château de Lunegarde
Château de Lunegarde
Crédit photo : VKaeru - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1290–1301
Possession of Guillaume Balène
1504
Counting of Jean d'Auriole
XVe siècle
Lordship of the Gaulejac
1736
Construction housing and west wing
1773
Completion of the east wing
16 septembre 1991
Registration Historic Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle (Box B 949): entry by order of 16 September 1991

Key figures

Guillaume Balène - Lord of Lunegarde Possessor between 1290 and 1301.
Mafre de Solignac - Heir husband Get the fief by marriage.
Jean d'Auriole - Lord in 1504 Feudal count quoted.
Antoine Vidal de Lapize - Farmers and builders Rebuilt the castle in the 18th century.
Duc d'Uzès - Former Lord Reinforced to Vidal de Lapize (1659).
Pierre Benoît - Writer Inspired by Lunegarde (Roman 1942).

Origin and history

The castle of Lunegarde finds its medieval origins as a fief linked to the abbey of Saint-Pierre de Marcilhac-sur-Célé. First possession of the Gourdon family, he passed between 1290 and 1301 to Guillaume Balène, then by marriage to Mafre de Solignac. Destroyed during the Hundred Years' War, the fief then changed hands several times: at the Gauléjac de Puycalvel (15th century), at Jean d'Auriole (1504), then at the Lagarde de Reilhac, Ginouilhac, and Crussol d'Uzès. In the 17th century, it was strengthened to Antoine Vidal de Lapize, whose descendants rebuilt the present building.

The present castle, located on the edge of the village of Lunegarde, is built in two phases by the Vidal de Lapize: the house and west wing were built in 1736, while the east wing was completed in 1773. Private property still owned by the heirs of this family, it was registered with the Historical Monuments on 16 September 1991. Although not open to the public, its architecture illustrates the evolution of seigneurial residences in Quercy in the Enlightenment century.

The original site of the castle was probably near the village church, as the historical sources show. The fief, originally linked to Marcilhac's singing, reflects the feudal dynamics and matrimonial alliances that marked the Quercy of the Middle Ages in modern times. The writer Pierre Benoît s'en inspired elsewhere for his novel Lunegarde, published in 1942, thus immortalizing this place in literature.

External links