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Château de Saint-Cirgues-de-Malbert dans le Cantal

Cantal

Château de Saint-Cirgues-de-Malbert

    1 Place Saint Cyr
    15140 Saint-Cirgues-de-Malbert

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1312
Construction of the first castle
1543
Transmission to Giscard
1645
Sale of ruins
1690
Reconstruction of the castle
1777
Sale to the Marquis d'Anjony
2005 et 2017
Repurchases for catering
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Géraud de Saint-Cirgues dit de Malfaras - Lord and Founder Builder of the first castle in 1312.
Jacques de Chaumeil - Rebuilder of the castle Initiator of the works in 1690.
François de Chaumeil - Coseigneur and builder Son of James, participating in the reconstruction.
Jean de Pestels de Levy - Master of the ruins Buyer in 1645 before exchange.
Claude-Louis de Leotoing, marquis d’Anjony - Last lord before 1789 Owner until the Revolution.

Origin and history

The Château de Saint-Cirgues-de-Malbert is a 17th-century building built in 1690 by Jacques de Chaumeil and his son François on the ruins of an ancient medieval castle. Located in the Cantal, in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, it stands 600 metres above sea level, on a rocky hilltop overlooking the village and its 11th century Romanesque church. The estate includes a three-storey rectangular house body, stables, barn, supply and garden. Its facades were once adorned with square mâchicoulis chopsticks, and its interior retains a stone staircase, monumental chimneys, as well as corbelled latrines.

The history of the site dates back to 1312, when Géraud de Saint-Cirgues, known as de Malfaras, erected the first castle, called Malfaras. The land then passed by covenant to the family of Puzols in the 14th century, then to the Albars, before being transferred in 1543 to the house of Giscard. In 1645 Jean de Giscard sold the ruins of the burning castle to Jean de Pestels de Levy, who exchanged them in the same year with Jacques de Chaumeil against the castle of La Roche-Loupiac. The reconstruction began in 1690, although financial constraints limited certain works, such as the walls of earthencast rather than lime.

In the 18th century, the castle changed hands several times: Marie-Françoise de Chaumeil brought François Dubois into dowry in 1733, then the seigneury was sold in 1777 to Claude-Louis de Leotoing, Marquis d'Anjony, for 110,000 pounds. Confiscated during the Revolution, the castle belonged to the Laden family in the 19th and 20th centuries, before being abandoned and then bought in 2005 and 2017 by private individuals for its restoration.

The interior of the castle reflects its past prestige: the ground floor housed living rooms decorated with golden paintings and scarlet velvet curtains, while the rooms on the first floor were lined with wool and decorated with green velvet. Kitchens, cellars and service rooms testify to a complex domestic organisation, with facilities such as a almost blind cellar-reserve to keep food. The upper floors welcomed the service rooms, equipped with smaller fireplaces.

Architecturally, the castle combines defensive elements inherited from the Middle Ages, such as scalables, with 17th century residential features. Its abandonment in the 21st century motivated safeguard campaigns, aimed at preserving this emblematic heritage of the Haute-Auvergne, classified among the remarkable castles of the Cantal.

External links