Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château de Roussillon in Saint-Pierre-Lafeuille dans le Lot

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Lot

Château de Roussillon in Saint-Pierre-Lafeuille

    Le Bourg
    46090 Saint-Pierre-Lafeuille
Château de Roussillon à Saint-Pierre-Lafeuille
Château de Roussillon à Saint-Pierre-Lafeuille
Château de Roussillon à Saint-Pierre-Lafeuille
Château de Roussillon à Saint-Pierre-Lafeuille
Crédit photo : Stéphane Batigne - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
800
900
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
VIIIe siècle
Alleged origin
XIIIe siècle
Initial construction
1355
English Take
XVe siècle
Reconstruction
1632
Royal visit
1929
Official protection
1958
Restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château de Roussillon (rests): inscription by decree of 29 March 1929

Key figures

Raymond d’Antéjac - Lord of Roussillon Gives the castle to the English in 1355
Jean III de Gontaud-d’Oriolle - Owner in the 17th century Welcomed Louis XIII in 1632
Gaucelin de Vayrols - Captain and Senechal Defend Cahors, acquired Roussillon in 1363
Famille Mailhol - Modern restaurants Save the castle since 1958

Origin and history

The Château de Roussillon is a medieval fortress built between the 12th and 15th centuries on the town of Saint-Pierre-Lafeuille, in the Lot (Occitanie). Built 300 metres above sea level on a strategic hillside, it overlooks the Curade Cove and historically controlled the northern accesses of Cahors and the tributary valleys of the Lot. Its vestiges, including three towers and a body of houses in two courtyards, bear witness to a defensive architecture adapted to the conflicts of the time, such as the Hundred Years War.

Originally, the castle consisted of eight towers, three houses, a chapel and a cloister, probably erected on the foundations of a 8th century fortress linked to the Duke of Aquitaine. In the 13th century he belonged to the Roussillon family, then passed to the English in 1355 when Raymond d'Antéjac, his lord, recognized the rights of the King of England over the crown of France. This change of hands is part of the context of the Second Hundred Years War, marked by fluctuating alliances in Quercy.

In the 16th century, the castle became a Protestant bastion before welcoming King Louis XIII in 1632, then owned by John III of Gontaud-d It was abandoned from the 18th century and escaped revolutionary destruction thanks to its state of ruin, but served as a stone quarry to neighbouring villages in the 19th century. Saved by a restoration initiated in 1958 by the Mailhol family, he partially recovered his original appearance, mixing military elements (pentagonal tower of the 13th century, gunboats of the 15th century) and traces of seigneurial life ( vaulted galleries, chapel).

The site, registered with the Historical Monuments since 1929, illustrates the architectural and political transformations of the medieval Quercy. Its enclosure, although dismantled, preserves bastioned towers and remains of house bodies. The excavations and restorations restored arrangements of the late 15th century, such as the trapezoidal low court flanked by round towers, or the stair tower serving the floors. The sources also mention noble families linked to its history, such as the Antéjac, the de Jean, or the Gontaud-Cabrerets, which made it a strategic issue until its decline.

Today, the castle of Roussillon combines evocative ruins and living parts, offering a tangible testimony of feudal struggles, defensive adaptations (bridge-levis replaced by a masonry bridge, herse) and seigneurial life in Occitanie. Its geographical positioning, less than 800 metres from the road from Cahors to Brive, highlighted its role in monitoring the region's commercial and military routes.

External links