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Château de Montfour à Tardes dans la Creuse

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Creuse

Château de Montfour

    Château de Montflour
    23170 Tardes

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVIe et XVIIe siècles
Initial construction and expansion
1883
Adding a square turret
1880-1895
Neogothic transformation
1895
Construction of the neogothic dungeon
6 juin 1996
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts and roofs of the castle; the three rooms with neo-Gothic décor on the ground floor: dining room, vestibule (except its painted wall decor) and large living room (box F 105): inscription by decree of 6 June 1996

Key figures

Ludovic Souchard - Owner and transformer of the castle Lawyer at Montluçon, responsible for neogothic additions.

Origin and history

The Château de Montfour, located in the commune of Tardes (Creuse, Nouvelle-Aquitaine), is a monument whose oldest parts date back to the 16th and 17th centuries. It was originally the seat of a seigneury of the Combraille, a historic Limousin region. The building consists of an ancient structure enlarged in the 17th century by a forebody forming pavilion, reflecting the architectural evolution of the period.

Between 1880 and 1895, the castle was profoundly transformed by Ludovic Souchard, a lawyer at Montluçon, who gave it the appearance of a neo-Gothic castle. A square turret was added in 1883, while in 1895 a crenellated dungeon-shaped pavilion was erected to the west, accompanied by a false castle with two dissymmetric turrets and a stair tower. These changes were part of the taste of the era for the medieval Romantic style, typical of the 19th century.

The estate also includes outbuildings such as a stable, a stable, a guard house, a dovecote and a pig house, demonstrating its role as a seigneurial residence and a farm. The castle, partially listed as a historical monument in 1996 for its facades, roofs and three interior rooms with neo-Gothic decoration, was disused between the two world wars. Today, its interior, empty of furniture, preserves panels and neogothic decors in the dining room, living room and vestibule.

The location of the castle in the Combraille, a region of hills and forests, reflects its historical importance as a centre of local power. The seigneury of Montfour, like many others in Limousin, was linked to the rural economy and networks of provincial nobility. The 19th century transformations illustrate the enthusiasm of bourgeois elites for the architectural reinterpretation of the Middle Ages, symbol of prestige and historical continuity.

The partial inscription of the castle in 1996 allowed to protect its most remarkable elements, including facades and roofs, as well as neo-Gothic interior decorations. These protections highlight the heritage value of a building that combines centuries of architectural history, from the Renaissance and classical periods to 19th-century eclecticism.

External links