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Château de Mourvilles-Basses en Haute-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Haute-Garonne

Château de Mourvilles-Basses

    Laborie
    31460 Mourvilles-Basses
Château de Mourvilles-Basses
Château de Mourvilles-Basses
Château de Mourvilles-Basses
Château de Mourvilles-Basses
Château de Mourvilles-Basses
Crédit photo : Monuments tale - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1306
Acquisition by the Villèles
4e quart XVIe siècle
Initial construction
début XVIIIe siècle
Extension of the castle
1890
Construction of the chapel
début XIXe siècle
Agricultural modernization
2001
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs of the castle and the two adjoining commons; the fence wall in the extension of the common is with its entrance gate; the chapel in full ( Box ZC 7): inscription by order of 23 August 2001

Key figures

Jean de Villèle - Lord and purchaser Acheta the seigneury in 1306.
Louis François Joseph de Villèle - Agricultural modernization Introduisit merinos and artificial meadows.
Joseph de Villèle - Politician and Minister Mayor of Toulouse, President of the Council.
Geneviève de Villèle (née de Mauléon) - Sponsor of the chapel Fits build the church in 1890.

Origin and history

The Château de Mourvilles-Basses is a seigneurial residence dating back to the 4th quarter of the 16th century, with major extensions in the early 18th century and interior redevelopments in the 1st quarter of the 19th century. It illustrates the architectural evolution of Toulouse country houses, moving from a defensive building of the Wars of Religion to an aristocratic residence. The original building, characterized by square towers in pink brick, was enlarged around 1700, then transformed by Count Joseph de Villèle, minister under the Restoration, who added a neo-Gothic chapel and communes.

The family of Villèle, lords of the place since 1306, deeply marked the history of the castle and the village. In the 19th century, Louis François Joseph de Villèle modernized local agriculture (artificial pastures, merino sheep), while his son, Joseph de Villèle — mayor of Toulouse, MP, and then president of the Council under Charles X — now resides in the castral chapel. The castle, left abandoned as a wheat attic for a century, was restored in the 20th century and classified as Historic Monument in 2001 for its facades, roofs, commons, and chapel.

Architecturally, the castle has a stylistic duality: the north facade, of Louis XIV style, contrasts with the older south facade, decorated with primitive darc keys. The park of 40 hectares, on a gentle slope towards the valley of the Marcaissonne, and the communes complete this whole. The chapel, built in 1890 by Countess Geneviève de Villèle, houses stained glass windows with family arms and an unfinished bell tower, reflecting the artistic and religious ambitions of its sponsors.

The site is part of Lauragais, a historical region linked to pastel culture and nicknamed "Languedoc wheat attic". The castle, symbol of seigneurial power and then of the royalist reconquest, reflects the economic and political changes of the Haute-Garonne, between Ancien Régime and Restoration. Its inscription in the Historical Monuments highlights its role in the Occitan rural heritage.

Today, the castle of Mourvilles-Basses remains a testimony to the strategies of adapting local elites, between medieval heritage and agricultural innovations. Its history is confused with that of an influential family, the Villèles, whose social ascent—from the Toulouse seigneury to the highest state office—is read in its walls and archives.

External links