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Château de Saint-Élix-le-Château en Haute-Garonne

Haute-Garonne

Château de Saint-Élix-le-Château


    Saint-Élix-le-Château
Original uploader was Paternel 1 at fr.wikipedia

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1900
2000
1540–1548
Construction of the castle
14 septembre 1545
Glassware contract
1927
Historical monument classification
1945
Fire and looting
années 1980
Restoration by Claude Cambou
2019–2022
State ownership and sales
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Pierre Potier de la Terrasse - Sponsor and first owner Secretary of François I
Laurent Clary - Architect of the castle Author of the Capitol dungeon
Joseph Gressier - Master glassmaker Creator of stained glass in 1545
Marquis de Montespan - Owner in the 17th century Spouse of Louis XIV's favorite
François Lucas - Sculptor of the eighteenth century Author of statues and bas-reliefs
Claude Cambou - Restaurant restaurant in the 1980s Protection after fire

Origin and history

The Château de Saint-Élix-le-Château was built between 1540 and 1548 for Pierre Potier de la Terrasse, secretary of François I and president of the Toulouse Parliament. Designed by the Toulouse architect Laurent Clary, famous for the dungeon of the Capitol, it combines medieval details (sculpted glacis, missing scallops) and Renaissance elements. The stained glass windows, made by Joseph Gressier in 1545, and the chimney of the École de Fontainebleau, decorated with the coat of arms of the Saint-Lary and Berthier families, illustrate his initial fascist.

In the 17th century, the castle passed into the hands of the Marquis de Montespan, husband of Louis XIV's favorite, Françoise de Rochechouart. He added an orangery and stables. His son, the Duke of Antin, sold him to Archbishop Jacob, who oversees the writing of the history of Languedoc by Benedictine monks. Three generations of Barons Ledesme (up to the Revolution) set up luxurious decorations: marbles, gold taps, and statues signed by François Lucas, author of the Ponts-Jumeaux de Toulouse.

In the 19th century, the Carrère families (local traders) transformed the castle into a place of knowledge, with a library and a Science Fair. The Dames Carrère leave precious writings there. The estate then changed hands (Suares d'Almeda family, Princess Lubomiriski) before being requisitioned during World War II. Fired in 1945, it was looted and restored in the 1980s by Claude Cambou. After unsuccessful sales attempts (2014, 2018, 2022), it now belongs to the state, which seeks to separate it.

The architecture, although partially altered (foldered, roofs felled during the Revolution), preserves brick facades, round towers, and emblematic sculptures. The house, squared on one floor, lost its second level in the 1945 fire. The regular gardens, orangery, and dovecot (classified in 1994) complete this heritage. Since 1989, the estate has hosted the Rencontres botaniques, exhibition of rare plants, suspended since 2017.

Ranked a historic monument in 1927, the castle houses a private collection (Penent Bazin family): photographs, statues of François Lucas, and archives of the Carrères. These rooms, accessible under conditions, feed exhibition projects. Despite its turbulent history, the site remains a major testimony of the Renaissance in Occitanie, combining art, power, and intellectual life.

External links