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Château de Rochecotte à Saint-Patrice en Indre-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Indre-et-Loire

Château de Rochecotte

    64 Rue Dorothée de Dino
    37130 Coteaux-sur-Loire
Château de Rochecotte
Château de Rochecotte
Château de Rochecotte
Château de Rochecotte
Château de Rochecotte
Château de Rochecotte
Crédit photo : Beaujabot - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1767
Erection in marquisat
1828
Purchase by the Duchess of Dino
1830
Foundation of the newspaper *Le National*
1840
Construction of the chapel
1940
Theft of the Treaty of Versailles
1948
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The buildings of the communes: inscription by decree of 22 May 1948

Key figures

Dorothée de Courlande, duchesse de Dino - Owner and patron Transformed the castle in the 19th century.
Talleyrand - Diplomat and resident Sitting there until his death.
Adolphe Thiers - Politician Attended meetings in 1830.
Boniface de Castellane - Dandy of the Belle Époque His marriage was celebrated in 1895.
Emilio Terry - Architect and owner Restaura le château (1934-1969).
Roger Peyrefitte - Writer and diplomat Witnessing the events of 1940.

Origin and history

The Château de Rochecotte, located in Saint-Patrice near Langeais in Indre-et-Loire, is a residence built at the end of the 18th century. It was thoroughly redesigned in the 19th century, notably by the Duchess of Dino, who undertook major expansion and decoration work after its acquisition in 1828. The estate, erected as a marquisat in 1767, was the scene of influential political meetings, such as those leading to the founding of the newspaper Le National in 1830.

The castle is inseparable from the figure of Talleyrand, uncle and lover of the Duchess of Dino, who stayed there regularly until his death in 1838. The Duchess installed a chapel there in 1840 at the location of her room, decorated with diplomatic memories and art objects. The estate then passed into the hands of the Castellane family, who organized a fabulous festival at the Belle Époque, before being transformed into a hotel-restaurant in the 20th century.

During the Second World War, the castle served as a refuge for diplomatic archives, including the original Treaty of Versailles, confiscated by the Germans in 1940. After several changes of owners, it was restored in the 1980s and partially classified as historical monuments in 1948. Its gardens, identified as remarkable, and its neoclassical architecture make it an emblematic site of the Touraine.

Among the notable anecdotes, Balzac was received there in 1836 but considered "vulgar" by the Duchess, while in 1944, a mysterious Austrian Baron, loving the chestnut, intrigued the premises by his double game between the Wehrmacht and the Resistance. Today the castle preserves traces of its prestigious past, despite the dispersion of its historic furniture in 1978.

The building consists of a central body flanked by two square pavilions, with a facade decorated with the coat of arms of Talleyrand. The chapel, built in 1840, features religious bas-reliefs and a triangular pediment. The commons, inscribed in the historical monuments, and the terraces offering a view of the Loire complete this architectural ensemble, witness to the fascists of the aristocracy and French diplomacy.

External links