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Millemont Castle dans les Yvelines

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Yvelines

Millemont Castle

    Le Château
    78940 Millemont
Château de Millemont
Château de Millemont
Château de Millemont
Crédit photo : Thor19 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1515
Construction of the small castle
1710
Construction of the large castle
1827
Acquisition by the Prince of Polignac
1872
Exile of Prince Napoleon
1947
Registration of communes
1965
Classification of the castle
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The commons: registration by decree of 28 April 1947; The castle as a whole: small and large castle (cad. A 35): classification by decree of 25 January 1965

Key figures

François Ier - King of France Baill of the Sieur d'Haville, indirect sponsor.
Guillaume IV de Briçonnet - Advocate General and Counsellor Builder of the large castle in 1710.
Prince de Polignac - Owner aristocrat Acquiert Millemont in 1827.
Maurice Richard - Minister of the Second Empire Heir and host of Prince Napoleon.
Prince Napoléon - Cousin of Napoleon III Exiled since Millemont in 1872.
Georges Béjot - Honorary currency exchange agent Owner late 19th, conservative family.

Origin and history

Millemont Castle, located in the Yvelines in Île-de-France, consists of two distinct parts: the "little castle", built in 1515 for the Sieur d'Haville, governor of Monfort and baili of King Francis I. This first building marks the Renaissance anchor of the estate, linked to the royal court of the time.

At the beginning of the 18th century, in 1710, Guillaume IV de Briçonnet, a general lawyer at the Grand Council and adviser to the Parliament of Paris, erected the "great castle". This project reflects the social ascent of the robins during the reign of Louis XIV and the Regency, transforming Millemont into a major aristocratic residence.

The castle changed hands several times in the 19th century: acquired in 1827 by the Prince of Polignac, then sold in 1843 to Richard, a Parisian lawyer whose son, Maurice Richard, minister under the Second Empire, inherited. The estate became a political place, welcoming Prince Napoleon in 1872, before his exile ordered by Thiers. After the death of Maurice Richard in 1888, the castle passed into the hands of the Béjot family and was sold in 1987 to controversial owners, before a recent restoration.

In terms of heritage, the communes have been listed as historical monuments since 1947, while the whole castle (small and large) is classified in 1965. The site, partially abandoned and then restored, also served as a setting for films such as Marie-Antoinette (2006) or Coco before Chanel (2009).

Today, Millemont Castle embodies both an architectural testimony of the 16th–15th centuries and a turbulent history, marked by political figures, heritage scandals and official recognition as an emblematic monument of the Yvelines.

External links