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Villars Castle in Dompierre-en-Morvan en Côte-d'or

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Côte-dor

Villars Castle in Dompierre-en-Morvan

    Château de Villars
    21390 Dompierre-en-Morvan
Château de Villars à Dompierre-en-Morvan
Château de Villars à Dompierre-en-Morvan
Crédit photo : Sdo216 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVe siècle
Seigneurial origin
1767
Construction of the castle
1791
Sale to Marie-Claude Champion
Fin XVIIe siècle
Autonomy of the domain
1921
Repurchase by René de Burtel
30 mars 1979
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs, main staircase with its wrought iron ramp, anteroom and living room on the ground floor with their decor, fireplace of bedroom number 2 on the first floor (box D 224): inscription by order of 30 March 1979

Key figures

Jean de La Trémouille - Lord of Courcelles-les-Semur At the origin of the dismemberment of the domain.
Marie-Jacqueline Desgeorges - Owner late 17th Wife of François Damoiseau, self-named Villars.
François de Chastenay - Builder of the castle The work began in 1767.
Marie-Claude Champion - Owner in 1791 Mayor of Avallon, buy the ruined castle.
René de Burtel de Chassey - Owner in 1921 Buy the estate in the 20th century.

Origin and history

The Castle of Villars, located in Dompierre-en-Morvan (Côte d'Or), is a building of the 3rd quarter of the 18th century. It was built in 1767 by François de Chastenay, who made it a modest seigneurial residence. Ruined, he had to yield it in 1791 to Marie-Claude Champion, then mayor of Avallon. The estate knew several owners in the 19th century before being bought in 1921 by René de Burtel de Chassey. Its classic architecture, with a rectangular plan and a Mansart roof, reflects the cannons of the era.

Coming from the dismemberment of the seigneury of Courcelles-lès-Semur in the 15th century, the domain of Villars became autonomous at the end of the 17th century, when Marie-Jacqueline Desgeorges, wife of François Damoiseau, took possession of it. Sold several times in the 18th century, the castle was partially listed as historical monuments in 1979, especially for its facades, its wrought iron staircase and some interior decorations.

According to the 1823 cadastre, the castle had already lost some outbuildings, such as a piece of water and gardens. Today, it retains its original plan, with Mansart roof wings and a central pediment. The protected elements also include a fireplace on the first floor and decorated lounges, testimonies of his aristocratic past.

The castle is located in the hamlet of Villars-Dombes, on the west bank of RD 70, southeast of the village. Its history reflects the changes of the Burgundian provincial nobility, between ephemeral splendor and economic decline, marked by changes in owners and architectural adaptations over the centuries.

External links