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Château de Montbard en Côte-d'or

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort

Château de Montbard

    Parc Buffon 
    21500 Montbard
Ownership of the municipality
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Château de Montbard
Crédit photo : Pline - 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
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1119
Fontenay Foundation
1189
Passage to the Dukes of Burgundy
Fin XIe siècle
Feudal origin
1423
Wedding of Anne of Burgundy
XIIIe–XIVe siècles
Transformation into a fortress
1477
Connection to the crown
1687
Adjudication to Abbé Lorin
1733
Buffon gets the castle
1749–1788
Drafting of the Natural History*
1862
Classification of the Aubespin tower
1947
Classification of the park and castle
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Tour du château, known as Tour de l'Aubépin : classification by list of 1862; Buffon Park with its entrance gate and the following buildings included in its enclosure: orangery with its gate, Saint-Louis tower and Buffon's work office: classification by decree of 17 December 1947

Key figures

Bernard Ier de Montbard - Feudal Lord Founder of the castle, father of André de Montbard.
André de Montbard - Co-founder of the Order of the Temple Son of Bernard I, fifth master.
Sainte Alèthe de Montbard - Mother of Saint Bernard Daughter of Bernard I, religious figure.
Bernard de Clairvaux - Cistercian Reformer Founded Fontenay Abbey in 1119.
Hugues III de Bourgogne - Duke of Burgundy Acquired the castle in 1189.
Louis XI - King of France Connects Montbard to the crown.
Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon - Naturalist and Count Turn the castle into a park.
Louis Jean-Marie Daubenton - Scientific Collaborator Contributes to natural history.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau - Philosopher of the Lights Pays tribute to Buffon.

Origin and history

The Château de Montbard came into being at the end of the 11th century, when Bernard I of Montbard, feudal lord, erected a wooden castral motte on a strategic site at the intersection of the valleys leading to Paris, Dijon and Semur-en-Auxois. This first castle marks the urban development of Montbard. His son, André de Montbard, will become one of the nine founders of the Order of the Temple, while his daughter, Saint Alèthe, will be the mother of Saint Bernard de Clairvaux, a Cistercian reformer who will found the Abbey of Fontenay nearby in 1119.

In 1189, the castle passed to the Dukes of Burgundy by exchange with Hugues III, marking the end of the local seigneurial lineage. In the 13th and 14th centuries, the Dukes transformed the building into a stone fortress, surrounded by ramparts and defensive towers, from which today the towers of the Aubespin and Saint-Louis remain. The chapel, dedicated to Saint Louis, bears witness to this period. In the 15th century, the castle welcomed the Dukes Valois of Burgundy and saw the marriage by proxy of Anne of Burgundy with Jean de Lancastre in 1423.

From 1477, the fief returned to the French crown under Louis XI, which entrusted him to successive noble families, including the Orléans-Longueville and the Savoie-Nemours. After a period of abandonment in the seventeenth century, the castle was awarded in 1687 to Abbé Lorin, parish priest of Montbard. In the 18th century, Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon, a famous naturalist, obtained its management in 1733 and radically transformed it: it filled the moat, lowered the ramparts and set up a park of three hectares on terraces, mixing gardens with French and Italian. The Saint-Louis Tower, reduced by one floor, houses its library, while a work office is built on the ramparts. Buffon wrote his Natural History (1749-1788), with the collaboration of Daubenton and Lacépede.

The park, now classified as a historic monument (1947), houses an LPO reserve and a museum dedicated to Buffon and Enlightenment, located in the former stables. The Aubespin tower, a former machicoulis master tower, has been classified since 1862. The site, owned by the city since 1870, perpetuates the scientific and landscape heritage of Buffon, while testifying to its medieval and ducal past.

External links