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Château de Meillant dans le Cher

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Château de style Louis XII
Route Jacques-Coeur

Château de Meillant

    22-32 Place du Pavé
    18200 Meillant
Private property
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Château de Meillant
Crédit photo : Manfred Heyde - 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
1800
1900
2000
XIe siècle
First mention of the castle
Fin XIIIe - début XIVe siècle
Construction of the houses by Étienne II de Sancerre
1473–1510
Reconstruction by Amboe
1842
Restoration by Louis Lenormand
2 mars 1926
Registration Historical monument
4 avril 1963
Classification of facades and roofs
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle, with the exception of parts classified: inscription by order of 2 March 1926; Facades and roofs (Case C 441): classification by decree of 4 April 1963

Key figures

Étienne II de Sancerre - Lord and builder Builds the initial houses (end XIIIe).
Charles Ier d’Amboise - Sponsor of work Launch the reconstruction (1473–1510).
Charles II d’Amboise - Governor of Milanese Finances the works through its Italian wealth.
Cardinal Georges d’Amboise - Work Supervisor Lead the construction site for his nephew.
Louis Lenormand - Architect restorer Restore the castle in 1842.
Duc de Mortemart - Owner and patron Order the restoration of the 19th century.

Origin and history

The castle of Meillant, attested from the 11th century, was originally built as a fortress by Stephen II of Sancerre in the late 13th and early 14th centuries. Two bodies of rectangular houses, framing a courtyard protected by ditches fed by winternon, remain from this period. The ramparts and moat, which disappeared in the 18th century, completed the defensive enclosure.

In the 15th century, the Amboise family undertook a major reconstruction between 1473 and 1510. Charles I of Amboise and his son Charles II, under the supervision of Cardinal d'Amboise, built the central house body, the chapel and the tower of the Lion, marked by a staircase with screws and an exuberant decoration of flamboyant Gothic style evolving towards Louis XII. The motto Milan made Meillant, attributed to Cardinal Bibbiena, illustrates the financing of the works by the Italian riches of Charles II, governor of Milan.

The castle underwent modifications in the 17th and 18th centuries, with the disappearance of the north gallery and the suppression of one floor. In 1842, architect Louis Lenormand carried out an ambitious restoration for the Duke of Mortemart: reconstruction of the upper floors of the east house, round roads, roofs and exterior carved decoration. Ranked a historic monument in 1926 and 1963, Meillant now combines medieval heritage and neo-Gothic interventions.

The families succeeded each other as owners: from the Sancerres (XI-14th centuries) to the Amboise (XVth-14th centuries), then to the Rochefoucauld, Brichanteau, and finally to the Bethune-Charost. In 1857, the Duchess of Charost offered the castle to her niece Virginie de Sainte-Aldegonde, wife of the Duke of Mortemart, whose descendants still owned it.

The architecture of Meillant reflects its evolution: medieval circular towers contrast with the square forebody of the late 15th century. The facade on the courtyard, especially the Lion Tower, concentrates the most remarkable decorations, while the 19th century restorations, such as the Carrée Tower or the stair turret, complete the ensemble in a neo-Gothic style.

The initial plan, close to that of the castle of Sagonne, bears witness to the influence of the family of Sancerre. The works of the Amboise, inspired by the Palais Jacques-Coeur in Bourges, mark the transition between Gothic and Renaissance. Despite the disappearance of the West Gallery, the remains of the park and the drawings of Claude Chastillon (early 17th) allow us to imagine the original aspect of this seigneurial residence.

External links