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Château du Bruget à Jaujac en Ardèche

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Ardèche

Château du Bruget

    Les Traverses
    07380 Jaujac
Ownership of a private company
Château du Bruget
Château du Bruget
Château du Bruget
Château du Bruget
Château du Bruget
Château du Bruget
Château du Bruget
Crédit photo : Celeda - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIVe siècle
Construction of stairs
1780
Sale to Aimé Monteil
Années 1930
Rescue of the castle
22 avril 1954
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château du Bruget : inscription by decree of 22 April 1954

Key figures

Famille de La Tour de Beins - Owner and alleged manufacturer Arms above the door
Emmanuel de Launay, comte d’Antraigues - Former owner (18th century) Sell the castle in 1780
Aimé Monteil - Acquirer in 1780 Lawyer of Jaujac
Georges Balaÿ - Restaurant restaurant ( 1930s) Save the castle from ruin

Origin and history

The castle of the Bruget stands as a rectangular building flanked by two towers to the north and a round tower to the south, housing a 14th century staircase. Its southern façade, pierced by rectangular windows and murderers, reveals traces of successive transformations. A stone engraved with coat of arms, discovered in 1985 above the entrance door, is attributed to the family of The Tower of Beins. Inside, a monumental fireplace on the first floor, adorned with decorated capitals and a stablely molded, was restored with slabs recovered from a chapel of Aubenas. The staircase with screws, covered with an umbel vault called "sarrasine", leads to an attic accessible by a small door.

The castle was reportedly built in the 17th century by the family of La Tour de Beins on older remains, before passing into the hands of the Launay. In 1780 Emmanuel de Launay, Count of Antraigues, handed him over to Aimé Monteil, a lawyer at Jaujac. After becoming a national during the Revolution, he was transformed into a farm and saved from the ruin in the 1930s by Georges Balaÿ and his sisters. The restorations of this period included the consolidation of the facade, the repair of the windows and the winding of the large chimney. Joined historical monuments in 1954, it now belongs to a private company.

The building illustrates the architectural evolution between the Middle Ages and the modern era, with defensive elements (murder, towers) and Renaissance additions (pathways, windows). The coat of arms of the La Tour de Beins family and the "sarrasine" vault underline its medieval heritage, while the transformations of the 17th and 18th centuries reflect its adaptation to residential needs. The reuse of materials, such as the slabs of the chapel of Aubenas, bears witness to restoration practices in the 20th century.

Located in the department of Ardèche, in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, the Château du Bruget is representative of the regional castral heritage. Its history, linked to local noble families (from La Tour de Beins, Launay), then to bourgeois owners (Monteil, Balaÿ), makes it a marker of the social and political changes of the Old Regime in the contemporary era. Its inscription in 1954 consecrated its heritage value, despite its post-revolutionary agricultural use.

External links