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Castle of the Conti dans le Val-d'oise

Val-doise

Castle of the Conti

    1 Rue de Conti
    95290 L'Isle-Adam

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
800
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
825
Initial construction
1069
First written entry
1360
Sale to Villiers
1527
Transmission to Montmorency
1632
Royal Confiscation
1669
Major fire
1707
Enlargement by the Grand Conti
1656-1792
Conti era
1798
Sale as a national good
1821
Partial reconstruction
2005
Municipal acquisition
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Adam (famille) - Founding Lords First owners, gave their name to the city.
Pierre Villiers - Acquirer in 1360 Grand master of the king's hotel, ancestor of the Villiers.
Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam - Grand Master of Malta Descendant des Villiers, born in 1464.
Anne de Montmorency - Connétable de France Reconstructed the castle in the 16th century.
Henri II de Montmorency - Last Montmorency owner Executed in 1632, confiscated property.
Armand de Bourbon-Conti - First prince of Conti owner Received the estate in 1656.
François Louis de Bourbon-Conti - The Great Conti Restore the castle and enlarge the estate.
Jean-Baptiste André - Architect in 1777 The castle is completely restored before its destruction.
Alfred Ducamp - Rebuilder in 1857 Builds a new castle on the ruins.

Origin and history

The castle of L'Isle-Adam, located on the island of Priory in Val-d'Oise, was originally built in 825 as a castle to counter Norman invasions. Mentioned in 1069 near a priory, he was entrusted to the Adam family, who gave his name to the city. In the Middle Ages, the seigneury included L'Isle-Adam, Parmain and Valmondois, and the castle was rebuilt several times.

In 1360 the castle passed to the Villiers de L'Isle-Adam, of which Philip (1464-1534) became Grand Master of the Order of Malta. By marriage he entered the Montmorency family in 1527 and was confiscated in 1632 after the execution of Henry II of Montmorency. Louis XIII restored him partly to his sisters, including Charlotte, wife of Henri II of Bourbon-Condé, thus integrating the estate into Condé's house.

In 1656 the castle became the property of the Conti, a branch of the Bourbons, after the division of property of Henri II of Condé. Armand de Bourbon-Conti inherited it, but it was his son, François Louis (the "Grand Conti"), who had it restored in 1707 after a fire in 1669. The estate was enlarged, and the castle modernized until its destruction in 1813, after its confiscation as a national property in 1798.

The site, strategic in the Middle Ages to control Oise, presented architectural challenges: small island size, soil instability and infiltration. The castle, of classical style after 1671, included a central body framed by pavilions, gardens and a performance hall. Its stables, built in 1777 for 225 horses, bear witness to its bliss before its demolition.

After 1821, a new house was built on the ruins by the Ducamp family and rebuilt after a fire in 1870. The site now houses the Louis Senlecq Museum of Art and History, managed by the municipality of L'Isle-Adam since 2005.

External links