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Senonnes Castle en Mayenne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Mayenne

Senonnes Castle

    26-28 Rue Jean Boby
    53390 Senonnes
Château de Senonnes
Château de Senonnes
Château de Senonnes
Château de Senonnes
Château de Senonnes
Château de Senonnes
Château de Senonnes
Crédit photo : Pymouss - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1332
First seigneurial mention
1548
François Le Poulchre maître d ́hôtel
1623
Conflict of succession
1645
Wedding of Pierre de la Motte-Baracé
1794
Guillotinage of the Marquis
17 février 1988
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle and its archaeological base (Box D 577): classification by decree of 17 February 1988

Key figures

Olivier de Tinténiac - Lord of Senonnes First owner known in 1332.
François Le Poulchre - Knight and Master of Hotel Master of the castle before 1537.
Adrienne de Salles - 17th century chestnut Arms visible in the decoration.
Pierre de la Motte-Baracé - Lord and Military Embellished the church and the castle.
François-Pierre de la Motte-Baracé - Last Marquis of Senonnes Guillotiné in 1794 during the Revolution.
Abbé Angot - Local historian Describes the castle at the beginning of the twentieth century.

Origin and history

Senonnes Castle, located in the eponymous village of Mayenne (Pays de la Loire), is an imposing building built mainly in local slate shale. Although partially in ruins at the beginning of the twentieth century, it was still inhabited by a farmer. Its sober architecture, without artistic ornaments, is distinguished by two floors of openings in the southwest corner of the courtyard and the remains of a enclosure including an isolated tower. The coat of arms of Adrienne de Salles, visible in the decoration, suggest renovations in the seventeenth century, when the castle was embellished under the impulse of the family of Motte-Barace.

The seigneury of Senonnes, originally under the control of Pouancé, was owned by several noble families, including the Tinteniacs (XIVth-15th centuries), the Poulchres (XVIth century), and the Motte-Baraces (XVIIth-15th centuries). The successional conflicts, like that between Jean-Marquis de la Motte-Baracé and François du Boisjourdan in 1623, illustrate the tensions linked to his legacy. In the 18th century, the Marquis François-Pierre de la Motte-Baracé, guillotine in 1794, affirmed the castle before its revolutionary confiscation. Returned to his heirs in 1798, the estate then included farmhouses and a cut wood, showing its local economic importance.

Ranked a historic monument in 1988 for its archaeological plate, the castle embodies the feudal and seigneurial history of Mayenne. Its gradual decline, already observed by Abbé Angot at the beginning of the twentieth century, contrasts with its past role as an administrative and military centre. The archives mention in particular its occupation by guards and a senechal in the eighteenth century, as well as religious beautifications commissioned by Pierre de la Motte-Baracé, as a sundial to the parish church.

The succeeding families of Senonnes reflect the alliances and conflicts of the Angelian and Breton nobility. Olivier de Tinténiac, first known lord in 1332, opened a line marked by strategic marriages, such as that of Guillaume de Tinténiac with Beatrix du Matz. In the 16th century, François Le Poulchre, master d'hotel of the Queen of Navarre and knight of the king, embodied the social ascent of the family, while his son Alexander, who died around 1580, illustrated the violence of the Wars of Religion. The posterity of the castle is also linked to figures like Adrienne de Salles, whose coat of arms still adorn the walls, or Jean de la Motte-Baracé, veteran of the Thirty Years' Wars.

External links