Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château de Montmaur in the Hautes-Alpes dans les Hautes-Alpes

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château

Château de Montmaur in the Hautes-Alpes

    Le Chemin Neuf
    05400 Montmaur
Owned by the Department
Château de Montmaur dans les Hautes-Alpes
Château de Montmaur dans les Hautes-Alpes
Château de Montmaur dans les Hautes-Alpes
Château de Montmaur dans les Hautes-Alpes
Château de Montmaur dans les Hautes-Alpes
Château de Montmaur dans les Hautes-Alpes
Château de Montmaur dans les Hautes-Alpes
Château de Montmaur dans les Hautes-Alpes
Crédit photo : Sylvain05 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIVe siècle
Initial construction
14 août 1588
Treaty of Montmaur
1590
Renaissance renovation
1614
Execution of Balthazar Fleet
1942–1944
Maquis of the Resistance
1988
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle, including the terrace in the South and the courtyard in the North (Box F 591): classification by order of 13 October 1988

Key figures

Balthazar Flotte de Montauban - Baron de Montmaur (1554–1614) Signatory of the Treaty of 1588, executed for treason.
François de Bonne de Lesdiguières - Chief Protestant Dauphinois Ally of the lords of Montmaur against Savoy.
Antoine Mauduit - Resistant Commander (1942–1944) Founded a maquis in the castle.
Guillaume Farel - Protestant Reformer (1489–1565) Originally from Gap, linked to the local Reformation.
Jean Flotte (capitaine Aurouze) - Protestant leader (died 1569) Predecessor of Lesdiguières in the region.
François Mitterrand - Future President (1916–1996) Stayed at the castle in 1942–43.

Origin and history

The Château de Montmaur, located in the Hautes-Alpes 15 km from Gap, finds its origins in the 14th century as a medieval fortress. In the 16th and 17th centuries, in particular in 1590, it was radically remodelled, where its scallops were replaced by four massive towers, two of which remain today. The site includes agricultural buildings ( stables, barns), a courtyard in the west, and halls with French ceilings and Renaissance fireplaces in gypsum. Its frescoes, dating from the Renaissance to the 18th century, and its walnut doors carved in trompe-l'oeil make it an artistic gem. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1988, it was bought in 2006 by the department to be restored and opened to the public.

The castle is inseparable from the wars of Religion that torn the Dauphiné. The region, the cradle of Protestantism with figures such as Guillaume Farel (from Gap) or François de Bonne de Lesdiguières, saw itself confronted by Catholics and Huguenots. The lords of Montmaur, such as Balthazar Flotte de Montauban (decapitated in 1614 for treason and bigamy), played an ambiguous role, changing sides according to their interests. The Treaty of Montmaur (1588), signed within the castle, sealed an ephemeral alliance between moderate Catholics (represented by Lavalette) and Protestants (Lesdiguières) against the aims of the Duke of Savoy and the Catholic League. This treaty illustrates the typical strategic reversals of the time, where loyalty to the French crown often prevailed over religious divisions.

In the 17th century, the revocation of the edict of Nantes (1685) led to the exodus of local Protestants, many of whom fled to Geneva or Neuchâtel. The castle, a symbol of seigneurial power, also became a place of resistance during the Second World War. In 1942, Commander Antoine Mauduit installed an early maquis, welcoming refugees, resistors and personalities like François Mitterrand or Serge Klarsfeld. The site served as a centre for forgery and preparation for the liberation fighting. Mauduit, deported in 1944, died shortly after his return and was buried in Montmaur in 1949.

The architecture of the castle reflects its many functions: defence (the so-called Saracen tower, missing ramparts), seigneurial residence (room of appartment, honorary staircase with doric/ionic columns), and agricultural farm (attitled farm). The chapel of Sainte-Philomene, close to the village, recalls the medieval religious heritage, while the remains of the old castle (XI century), perched at 1,351 m above sea level, testify to the first fortifications of the Montauban. The site, open to the public since the 2000s, offers visits, exhibitions and summer shows.

The legend of a Saracen origin of the village, linked to the Saracen tower, is overturned by historians such as Joseph Roman (1887), who point to the absence of evidence of Arab invasions in the Upper Alps. The toponym Montmaur (attested under Monsmaurus in 1120) would rather come from the Latin mons (mount) and Maurus (black), evoking a dark hill. However, this confusion persists in the local culture, fuelled by stories like Gustave Le Bon, who attributed the Saracens a lasting influence in the region.

Today, the castle of Montmaur embodies both an exceptional architectural heritage and a complex historical memory, combining feudal power, religious conflicts, and resistant engagement. Its acquisition by the Hautes-Alpes department allowed its preservation, while making it a place of transmission of Dauphinian history, from medieval barons to guerrillas of 1944.

External links