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Castle of Puilaurens dans l'Aude

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Châteaux cathares
Les cinq fils de Carcassonne

Castle of Puilaurens

    34 Sur le Moulin
    11140 Puilaurens

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
958
First mention of Mount Ardu
1217
First known chestnut
1242
Cathar refuge
1255
Fortification by Louis IX
1258
Treaty of Corbeil
1636
Taken by the Aragonese
1659
Progressive abandonment
1902
Historical monument classification
2021
Restoration campaign
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Pierre Catala - Châtelain (1217) First lord certified in Puilaurens.
Roger Catala - Châtelain (1242) Son of Peter, hold the castle.
Louis IX - King of France Order the fortification in 1255.
Odon de Monteuil - Châtelain (1260) Command the Royal Garrison.
Pierre Paraire - Cathar deacon Refuge to the castle in 1242.
Blanche de Bourbon - Local Legend Associated with the White Lady's Tower.

Origin and history

The castle of Puilaurens, perched on a rocky spur at 697 meters above sea level in Aude, is an ancient castle known as "cathare", now in ruins. Mentioned as Mont Ardu in a Lothaire charter as early as 958, it housed a Carolingian fortified church, St. Lawrence. Integrated into the defensive system of the "Five Sons of Carcassonne" (with Quéribus, Peyrepertuse, Termes and Aguilar), he locked access to the Fenouillèdes against the kingdom of Aragon. His strategic role was affirmed after the Treaty of Corbeil (1258), when Louis IX ordered his fortification to protect Languedoc.

The Cathar presence in Puilaurens was attested during the crusade against the Albigois: the deacon Pierre Paraire stayed there in 1242, and the site served as a refuge for perfect and believers between 1240 and 1246. In 1255, Louis IX financed work to make it a royal citadel, with a garrison of 25 sergeants d'armes in 1260. The castle resisted several Aragonese seats, but fell in 1636 by default of defense. After the Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659), which pushed back the French-Spanish border, it was gradually abandoned from the 17th century.

Architecturally, Puilaurens combines a lower court and a high court, with evolutionary defensive systems (chicans, barbacans, semi-circular towers) adapted to medieval weapons and then to cannons. The Tour de la Dame Blanche, legendaryly associated with Blanche de Bourbon, and cisterns testify to its logistical role. Ranked a historic monument since 1902, the site is regularly restored, including a major campaign since 2021 to secure the remains. An application to UNESCO is envisaged to enhance its royal military architecture.

The castle was in the heart of a castrum including a village, now extinct. Its ruins, communal property, are visited from March to November. Recent excavations and diagnostics (2019) allowed to specify the phases of construction, mixing medieval elements (XIII century) and subsequent additions (XVI century). The site offers a panorama of the Boulzane valley, the Pic de Bugarach, and the surrounding villages, recalling its role as a border sentinel.

The written sources evoke shawls such as Pierre Catala (1217) or Roger Catala (1242), as well as figures such as Odon de Monteuil, commander of the garrison in 1260. The archives also mention deliveries of weapons (arbalets, shields) and food (wheat, salted pigs) to support defenders. After the Revolution, the definitive abandonment of the site marks the end of its military use, but its state of conservation makes it today a major testimony of medieval Occitan history.

External links