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Château du Champ à Altier en Lozère

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château Médiéval et Renaissance
Lozère

Château du Champ

    Le Champ
    48800 Altier
Château du Champ
Château du Champ
Château du Champ
Château du Champ
Château du Champ
Château du Champ
Château du Champ
Château du Champ
Crédit photo : Ancalagon - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1375
Union of Altier and Borne
fin XIIIe siècle
Origins of castelet
Fin XIIIe siècle
Initial construction
XVe–XVIe siècles
Major transformations
XVIe siècle
Renaissance expansion
1793-1796
Revolutionary period
1796
Post-Revolution Repurchase
1860
Restoration by Chapelain
1942
Site classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Fronts and roofs; the garden (cf. K 243; D 1025): entry by order of 14 April 1965

Key figures

Armand de Borne - Lord and Founder The Borne d'Altier line was created by her marriage.
Delphine d'Altier - Inheritance Last of the Altiers, married Armand de Borne in 1375.
Charles Elisabeth Michel de Borne d'Altier - Last male heir Emigrated in 1793, died without seed in 1812.
Jules de Chapelain - Sub-prefect and owner Heir in 1812, undertook major renovations.
Joseph Varin d'Ainvelle - Current owner (since 1928) He bought the castle from his aunt in 1928.

Origin and history

The Château du Champ, located in Altier en Lozère, finds its origins at the end of the 13th century as a fortified house built by the family of Altier, one of the oldest in Gevaudan. Built on a rocky spur surrounded by the Altier River, its strategic location in a narrow meander made any attack difficult. This initial castrum, organized in square with three towers and an isolated dungeon, reflected the defensive needs of the medieval era. The site, classified in 1942, was gradually transformed by its successive owners, while maintaining prominent feudal elements such as the shale walls and the protective ditch.

Transmitted by female heritage for seven centuries, the castle passed from the hands of the Altier (1308-1375) to the Borne d'Altier family (1375-1828) via the marriage of Armand de Borne with Delphine d'Altier in 1375. This line, entitled Count of Altier and Marquis du Champ, deeply marked the history of the place. After the Revolution, the castle was bought by the Chapelain family (1812-1905), who undertook major renovations such as the enhancement of the beheaded towers and the creation of a vestibule gallery. The transformations of the 19th century, including a crackling of the facades, gave it its present appearance, between feudal character and romantic elegance.

The architecture of the castle evolved significantly between the 15th and 18th centuries. The addition of the north wing in the 16th century, recognizable to its Renaissance stencil windows, relied the dungeon to the main body, forming a plan in "U". In the 18th century, large windows and the creation of a double revolution pole softened its defensive appearance, while the medieval chapel was converted into a kitchen. During the Revolution, the castle suffered degradation: razed towers, looting and seizure of land. The latest changes, such as the demolition of the inner rampart by the Chapelains, revealed the central courtyard still visible today.

Ranked a historical monument in 1942 (site) and then in 1965 (façades, roofs and park), the Château du Champ has remained a private property since 1928, owned by the Varin d'Ainvelle family. Its history reflects that of the Gevaudan, between seigneurial power, complex family transmissions and architectural adaptations. Although not open to the public, it was used as a decoration for the film Saint-Jacques... Mecca (2005) and bears witness, by its stones, to nearly 700 years of the same owner lineage, a rare case in French heritage.

The castle is part of a spectacular cevenol landscape, between green valleys and steep cliffs, close to the hiking trails GR 68 and GR 44. Its slender dungeon, scauguettes and two successive enclosures (outside with defence towers, inside with ramparts) illustrate medieval military techniques. Local materials – granite, limestone and shale – and successive developments (from the Middle Ages to the 19th century) make it a unique example of architectural evolution, where feudal traces, Renaissance and modern modifications blend together. Its initial isolation, reinforced by the river and reliefs, made it a symbol of power in this border region of Languedoc.

External links