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Château de Villeneuve-Lembroon dans le Puy-de-Dôme

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château Médiéval et Renaissance
Puy-de-Dôme

Château de Villeneuve-Lembroon

    14 Route de Lembron
    63340 Villeneuve
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Château de Villeneuve-Lembron
Crédit photo : Loulousteph - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
fin XVe siècle
Construction of the castle
début XVIe siècle
Passage to Montmorin
1643
Acquisition by Isaac Dufour
25 mai 1926
Historical monument classification
1937
Gift to the State
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle, with its interior decoration, its ditches, the entrance door of the neighbouring farm and the vaulted room decorated with paintings located to the right of this entrance door bordering the public road: classification by order of 25 May 1926

Key figures

Rigaud d’Aureille - Auvergne Mountain Baill and Royal Hotel Master Sponsor of the castle at the end of the 15th century.
Gaspard de Montmorin - Member of the Montmorin family Added decorations painted in the sixteenth century.
Isaac Dufour - Treasurer of France in Riom Transformed the courtyard and interiors in 1643.
Georges Tixier - Last private owner Gift of the castle to the state in 1937.
Élisabeth Catherine Dufour de Villeneuve - Heir and wife of Michel Pellissier de Féligonde Transferred the castle to the Pellissier family.

Origin and history

The Château de Villeneuve-Lembron was built at the end of the 15th century for Rigaud d'Aureille, bailli of the Auvergne mountains and master of the Louis XI Kings Hotel at François I. This influential figure, also ambassador to Maximilian of Austria, marked the history of the place by his political role and his taste for the arts, as evidenced by the first painted decorations still visible today.

At the beginning of the 16th century, the land of Villeneuve passed to the Montmorin family. Gaspard de Montmorin enriched the castle with murals, especially in the hall of the building and the stables, where mythological representations and satirical scenes remain. These additions reflect the evolution of artistic tastes towards the Renaissance, while preserving traces of medieval imagination, such as the humorous frescoes of the inner courtyard.

In 1643, Isaac Dufour, treasurer of France at Riom, acquired the estate and undertook important work: transformation of the inner courtyard, addition of a portico gallery, and decoration of the ceilings and fireplaces on the first floor. The castle then changed hands by marriage alliances, passing to the Feligonde Pellissier in the 18th century, then to the Thuret Barons until 1919. These families helped to preserve and embellish the monument, as evidenced by the eight portraits of Féligonde's Pellissier recently relocated to the white living room.

Ranked a historic monument in 1926 for its ditches, entrance door, and interior decorations, the castle was given to the state in 1937 by its last private owner, Georges Tixier. Since then, the National Monuments Centre has managed the site, carrying out major restorations while opening the site to the public. Its architecture, combining medieval defensive elements (round towers, ditches) and recreational facilities (galeries, paintings), makes it a rare witness to the transition between two epochs.

Interior decorations are one of the main assets of the castle. The vault of the stables allegorically contrasts good and evil, while the burning of the windows houses figures of Roman mythology. The courtyard, decorated with satirical frescoes as the Bigorne or the astrologer's, illustrates the persistence of medieval themes in a Renaissance setting. These paintings, studied by historians like F. Enaud or Annie Bohat-Regond, underline the artistic importance of the site.

External links