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Château des Ifs in Montsûrs en Mayenne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Mayenne

Château des Ifs in Montsûrs

    Les Grands Ifs
    53150 Montsûrs
Private property

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
vers 1350
Assignment to Jehan Auvé
1390
Wedding of La Chapelle-Auvé
1507
Will of Robin Trouillon
1523
Tribute to Beaudouin de Champagne
1er février 1567
Award to Jehan Arnoul
1567
Award to Jehan Arnoul
2 novembre 1998
Registration Historic Monument
1998
Registration of the chapel
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The chapel Saint-Ouie and the portal of the castle, in full (Box B 605): inscription by decree of 2 November 1998

Key figures

Guy de Chamaillard - Viscount of Beaumont Former lord, ceded the land in 1350.
Jehan Auvé - Lord of Soulgé First known owner of the Ifs.
Jehan Le Chappelays - Lord of La Chapelle Acquire seigneury by marriage in 1390.
Robin Trouillon - Marchand lavallois Finance of Masses in 1507.
Jehan Arnoul - Acquirer in 1567 Buyer of If land.

Origin and history

The Ifs Castle, located in Montsûrs in the present Mayenne, was built in the first half of the 16th century. It belonged to the châtellenie de Bazugers, which was itself integrated into the county of Laval, making the count of Laval the suzerain of this seigneury. The land of the Ifs, including rights of justice and tributes, was passed on between noble families in the 14th century, notably by alliance or sale, before being partially alienated in the 16th century. Today, only the chapel of Saint-Ouie, built at the beginning of the sixteenth century, and scattered remains of the castle remain.

The chapel Saint-Ouie, the only intact vestige, features remarkable architectural elements such as its entrance door and washbasin, as well as 17th-century murals discovered under badigeons. It was listed in the Historical Monuments on November 2, 1998, as was the castle portal. The other, less well-preserved remains bear witness to the past importance of this seigneury, linked to influential families such as the Auvé, the de La Chapelle or the Arnoul, which made it a place of local power.

As early as 1350, the seigneury of the Ifs was transferred by Guy de Chamaillard, Viscount of Beaumont, to Jehan Auvé, seigneur of Soulgé, with all the rights of justice. Over the centuries, it changed hands by marriage (like that of Jehan Le Chappelays with Ambroise Auvé in 1390) or transactions involving wealthy merchants such as Robin Trouillon, donor for the churches of Laval in the early 16th century. In 1567 Jehan Arnoul acquired the land of the Ifs for 1,700 books tournaments, marking the end of his membership in the local noble families.

The site, now reduced to its chapel and ruins, illustrates the evolution of secondary seigneuries in Mayenne, often dependent on regional powers such as Laval County. The remains and archives reveal its role in the networks of fidelity and economic exchanges between local nobility and rising bourgeoisie, typical of the Renaissance in Anjou-Maine.

Archaeological and historical sources, such as the Archeological Review of Maine or the Merimée base, underline the heritage importance of the site, despite the almost total disappearance of the castle. The chapel, with its architectural details and paintings, offers a rare testimony of 16th century rural religious art in the region.

External links