First written entry XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Cartular of the Abbey of La Roë (*P. de Sancto Amatore*)
1547
Attestation of the chapel
Attestation of the chapel 1547 (≈ 1547)
Mentioned in archives before deletion
XVIIe siècle
Construction of the current castle
Construction of the current castle XVIIe siècle (≈ 1750)
Hullin Family Work
1778
Royal Subsidy
Royal Subsidy 1778 (≈ 1778)
400 pounds for a local road
fin XIXe siècle
Missing the chapel
Missing the chapel fin XIXe siècle (≈ 1995)
Removal during renovations
début XXe siècle
Agricultural modernization
Agricultural modernization début XXe siècle (≈ 2004)
Role of Victor de Broglie
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Famille Hullin - Builders of the castle
Builders in the 17th century
Victor de Broglie - Agricultural modernization
20th Century Innovation Centre
Famille de Saint-Amadour - Seigneurial line
Weared *three wolf heads*
Origin and history
The castle of Saint-Amadour, located in La Selle-Craonnaise in the department of Mayenne, is mentioned from the twelfth century under the name P. de Sancto Amatore in the cartular of the Abbey of Roë. The archives reveal successive toponymic evolutions: G. de Saint Amador (1474), G. de Saint Amadour (1529), then seigneury of Saint Amador (1543), reflecting his status as a moving seigneurial land of the Ile-Tison, with limited rights (low justice) until its expansion in the eighteenth century as center of vast agricultural estates.
Built in the 17th century by the Hullin family, the house is distinguished by an elevated north façade on a terrace, offering views of a wooded landscape, while the south facade, decorated with a back wing and a winter lounge added at the end of the 19th century, dominates lawns and ponds. The park, structured in quinconce, and the historical tapestries (like the Amours de Gombault and Macée) bear witness to its prestige. The chapel, attested in 1547, was abolished at the end of the 19th century.
In the 18th century, the castle became a pole of agricultural innovation under the impulse of Victor de Broglie, spreading in the Craonnais modern methods of breeding and cultivation. The family of Saint-Amadour, allied with noble lines such as the d'Avaugour or the Montmorency, carries Gules to three heads of silver wolf and disappears in the middle of the seventeenth century. The domain thus illustrates the evolution of local seigneuries, between feudal power and adaptation to economic challenges.
The archives mention royal grants, such as the £400 awarded in 1778 for the construction of a road linking Saint-Amadour to Barberelle, highlighting its role in territorial planning. The sources (Angot, Cassini, Chartriers de Craon) confirm its historical importance, between medieval heritage and transformations of the 17th to 19th centuries.
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