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Château de Noirieux à Saint-Laurent-des-Mortiers en Mayenne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de plaisance
Mayenne

Château de Noirieux

    Noirieux
    53290 Saint-Laurent-des-Mortiers
Private property
Château de Noirieux
Château de Noirieux
Château de Noirieux
Château de Noirieux
Château de Noirieux
Château de Noirieux
Château de Noirieux
Château de Noirieux
Crédit photo : Noirieux - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
0
100
1700
1800
1900
2000
11–12 janvier 1795
Facing Chouans vs Republicans
1742–1747
Construction of the current castle
27 septembre 1747
Blessing of the chapel
1842
Buying by the Quatrebarbes
1978
Repurchase by the Dejean Potier de La Bâtie
11 avril 1990
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs of the castle and the orangery (Box A 138): inscription by decree of 11 April 1990

Key figures

Louis-Pierre Ernault de Montiron - Adviser to the King and builder Sponsor of the present castle (1742–47).
Joseph Coquereau - Chief royalist caulian Leads the 1795 confrontation to the castle.
Abbé Baudoin - Refractory priest quoted by Victor Hugo Famous underground Mass in 1795.
Léopold I de Quatrebarbes - Baron restaurateur (11th century) Renovated the chapel and estate in 1842.
Jeanne Grenet - Owner in the 20th century Sell the castle in 1973 after preserving it.
François-Xavier Potier - Current owner (since 1978) Start the restoration of the estate.

Origin and history

The Château de Noirieux, located in the delegated commune of Saint-Laurent-des-Mortiers (Mayenne), has its origins in the Middle Ages in the form of a fief of Azé or Château-Gontier. The first written records date back to the 11th century, with spelling variants like Noyieux or Noerieux, perhaps evoking a place planted with walnuts. The site, crossed by an ancient Roman route linking Angers to the confluence of the Sarthe and Mayenne, successively houses several seigneurial families, including the Briand (XVth-17th centuries), the Le Maistre (VIIth century), and the Goislard de Montsabert, who gave up the estate in 1742.

The building of the present castle began in 1742 under Louis-Pierre Ernault de Montiron, the king's adviser, who demolished the former manor house of the Grenonnière to build an 18th-style residence, completed in 1747. The chapel, dedicated to Notre-Dame Refuge des Pêcheurs, was blessed the same year and played a clandestine religious role during the Terror. In 1795, the castle became the scene of a bloody confrontation between Chouans, led by Joseph Coquereau, and the Republican troops, leaving traces of bullets in the walls and a commemorative plaque in the chapel.

In the 19th century, the family of Quatrebarbes acquired Noirieux in 1842 and undertook important restorations, including that of the chapel, authorized by the bishop of Le Mans in 1849. A cross path is erected there, and Pope Pius IX offers a blessed ciborium (now gone). The estate, passed to the Letourneurs du Val and then to the Grenet in the 20th century, houses a novitiate during the Second World War before being transformed into a farm and then a rural gite. Since 1978, the Potier Dejean de La Bâtie has been working on its restoration, preserving its architectural and historical heritage.

The castle, which has been listed as a Historic Monument since 1990 for its facades and roofs, preserves remarkable elements such as a double enclosure of moat (partly filled), a park wooded with centuries-old oaks, and outbuildings including a bakery and an orange shop. Its history reflects the political and social upheavals of Anjou and Mayenne, from the wars of Religion to the Revolution, through German occupation.

Among the notable anecdotes, a slate dating from 1747, found in 1880, attests to the end of the work, while a plaque in the chapel commemorates the victims of 1795. The archives also mention the faithfulness of the farmers, who had been attached to the land for four centuries, and the presence of German graffiti engraved during the Second World War. The estate, reduced to 10 hectares today, remains a living testimony to the rural and noble heritage of western France.

External links