Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château du Chambon à Cerzat en Haute-Loire

Château du Chambon

    65 Impasse du Fort
    43380 Cerzat
Private property

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1409
Initial construction
XVIIe siècle
Sale after extinction lineage
1800-1850 (environ)
Major work
28 juillet 1998
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle in total (Box B 275): inscription by order of 28 July 1998

Key figures

Guillaume de Blau - Lord and builder Founded the castle in 1409.
Françoise Blau de Gibertès - Last heir His death led to the sale.
Jean Véal - First bourgeois owner Acheta the castle in the seventeenth.
Jean Balthazar Véal de Blau - Officer and Mayor Property sequestered during the Revolution.
Messieurs de Lastic et de Chazelles - Final legatees Inherited from the estate.

Origin and history

The château du Chambon, located in Cerzat in Haute-Loire, is a 15th century fortress built in 1409 by Guillaume de Blau, lord of Gibertès, Auvers and Cronce. The latter abandoned his castle of La Roche-Blau to settle in Chambon, a less harsh climate. The Blau family, known since 1160 for its possessions near Brioude, kept the castle until the 17th century, when it was sold after the extinction of the lineage with Françoise Blau de Gibertès.

Acquired by Jean Véal, a bourgeois of Langeac, the castle changed hands several times. During the Revolution, Jean Balthazar Véal de Blau, an officer hostile to the regime, lived his property sequestered before returning to France under the Restoration. Without an heir, he left the estate to the families of Lastic and Chazelles. In the 19th century, major improvements were made: a stone terrace was added as a foothill, a neo-Gothic opening pierced on the north facade, and monumental chimneys installed in the main rooms.

The castle, surrounded by a park lined with walls, features a rectangular plan with a corner tower and a staircase turret. The south facade, made of stone, contrasts with the other walls in stone. Inside, there is a 15th century staircase, 16th century carved doors, and 17th and 19th century fireplaces, including a sphinx and foliage adorned. Ranked a historic monument in 1998, the castle experienced periods of abandonment before being partially restored from 1946 by its successive owners.

The original defensive elements, such as the killers of the west tower or the door in front of the north facade, coexist with subsequent additions, such as the wooden drawbridge connecting the garden to the raised entrance. The living room preserves a 17th-century fireplace with a pedestal decorated with lion heads, while the dining room, redecorated in the 19th century, has a French ceiling and a moulure hood. These transformations illustrate the evolution of the castle, from a medieval fortress to a humanised aristocratic residence.

External links