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Nesles Castle à Seringes-et-Nesles dans l'Aisne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Aisne

Nesles Castle

    Le Château de Nesles
    02130 Seringes-et-Nesles
Private property
Château de Nesles
Château de Nesles
Château de Nesles
Crédit photo : Markus3 (Marc ROUSSEL) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1900
2000
vers 1226
Foundation of the castle
1370
Change of seigneury
1421-1423
English Headquarters
1436
Transmission to Guillaume de Flavy
1449
Killing of Guillaume de Flavy
29 mai 1922
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Walls with towers and dungeons, with the exception of the built-in farm buildings: by order of 29 May 1922

Key figures

Robert III de Dreux - Count of Brain and founder Built the castle around 1226.
Jehan de La Personne - Viscount of Acy and companion of Du Guesclin Owner in 1370, former Senechal of Poitou.
Guillaume de Flavy - Former Captain of Compiègne Accused of betraying Joan of Arc.
Blanche de Flavy - Wife of Guillaume de Flavy Organizer of his assassination in 1449.
Pierre de Louvain - Complete and second husband Killed in 1463 by the Flavy brothers.
Robert III de Dreux (dit Gasteblé) - Count of Brain and founder Commander of the castle around 1226.
Gaucher de Châtillon - Connétable de France Lord of the castle by marriage (XIIIe-XIVe).
Pierre de Rieux - Marshal of France Prisoner at the castle, died in 1439.

Origin and history

The castle of Nesles was built around 1226 by Robert III de Dreux, Count of Braine and Capetian descendant, under the permission of Count Thibaud of Champagne. Inspired by the Dourdan castle built by Philippe Auguste, this monument adopts a symmetrical quadrangular plan, characteristic of the so-called philippian architecture. Its eight identical towers and its large cylindrical master tower (30 meters high, walls 5 meters thick) make it a remarkable example of a streamlined medieval fortification. The entrance door, framed by two towers, opens into the north court.

The seigneury changed hands by marriage alliances: she passed to the Châtillon (family of the connétable Gaucher) until 1370, then to Jehan de La Personne, companion of arms of Du Guesclin and first captain of the Bastille in 1385. The castle was besieged and taken by the English between 1421 and 1423, before being passed on to Guillaume de Flavy in 1436. The latter, accused of having betrayed Joan of Arc at the time of his capture at Compiègne, held in prison Marshal Pierre de Rieux, who died there in 1439. Flavy was murdered in 1449 by his wife Blanche and his lover Pierre de Louvain, triggering a family vendetta.

The remains of the castle, including the enclosure and its towers (excluding later agricultural buildings), were classified as historical monuments in 1922. The site testifies to feudal struggles and military strategies of the Middle Ages, while reflecting the political intrigues and alliances that marked the region. Its architecture, copied on Dourdan, highlights the influence of Philippe Auguste's defensive innovations in northern France.

Blanche de Flavy, widow after the murder of her husband, remarried with Pierre Puy, adviser to the Paris Parliament, illustrating the matrimonial recompositions and power games among the aristocracy of the time. The castle, now in ruins, nevertheless retains major structural elements that allow us to study the evolution of castles between the 13th and 15th centuries.

External links