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Château de Quintigny dans le Jura

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Jura

Château de Quintigny

    Chemin des Vignes
    39570 Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Château de Quintigny
Crédit photo : Thiergau - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1290 et 1358
First written statements
XVIe siècle
Acquisition by the Desprez
1739
Interior fittings
15 avril 1987
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

All facades including galleries and roofs; chapel; staircase facing the house, fireplace and ceiling of the North room and fireplace of the North-East room on the first floor of the house (east of the chapel); all the rooms on the ground floor of the communes (east of the north carriageway door) (Cd. AC 123, 250, 251): inscription by order of 15 April 1987

Key figures

Jean de Jauche (dit Bouton) - Lord of Saligny and Quintigny Knight, ancestor of the Quintigny Button.
Jeanne Bouton - Lady of Quintigny and the Bar Heir, married to N. de Sainte-Croix.
Joachim de Beaurepaire - Owner around 1670 Get the fief before the Revolution.
Alexandre de Fauchier, marquis de Lullin - Last lord before 1789 Owned the castle with Antoine de Mailly.

Origin and history

The castle of Quintigny is an ancient medieval fortress, built in the 13th century as the seat of the seigneury of Quintigny, vassal of the seigneury next to L'Étoile. Located 3 km northwest of L'Étoile and 9 km from Lons-le-Saunier, it is mentioned for the first time in writings of 1290 and 1358. The estate, with an area of 7 hectares, initially included a seigneurial house, a chapel dedicated to Saint Claude, agricultural outbuildings, as well as a vineyard, an orchard and a forest.

The chapel, flamboyant Gothic style with a warhead window, still serves today as a parish church for the village. The castle, rebuilt in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, preserves architectural elements like a vaulted portal surmounted by turrets in corbellation. The interior apartments were set up in 1739, as evidenced by the old fireplace plates, while the agricultural parts were modified in the 19th century.

Owned by several noble families, the castle passed into the hands of the Boutons (XIVth–XVth centuries), the Desprezs (XVIth century), then the Beaurepaire and Fauchier before the Revolution. Since 1987, it has been listed as a Historic Monument for its outstanding facades, roofs, chapels and interior elements. Today, the estate is a private wine-growing site, produces wines under the AOC The Star, and remains a testimony of the seigneurial and wine-growing history of Jura.

Among the notable lords, Jean de Jauche (known as Bouton) and his descendants, including Jeanne Bouton married to N. de Sainte-Croix, shaped the history of the place. In the 17th century, Joachim de Beaurepaire and Alexandre de Fauchier, Marquis de Lullin, also owned it. The chapel, enlarged to serve as a village place of worship, illustrates the close link between the castle and the local community.

The site, still in winemaking activity, combines architectural heritage and wine production. Its inscription in the Historical Monuments protects a coherent whole: seigneurial house, chapel, staircase, and common. The renovations of the 19th and 20th centuries (like the porch dated 1892) testify to its continuous adaptation to agricultural and residential uses.

External links