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Château du Haut-Buc dans les Yvelines

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style néo-classique et palladien
Château du Haut-Buc
Château du Haut-Buc
Château du Haut-Buc
Château du Haut-Buc
Château du Haut-Buc
Château du Haut-Buc
Château du Haut-Buc
Château du Haut-Buc

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1681
Legitimation of the Count of Toulouse
1740
Destruction of the castle
1864-1866
Reconstruction of the castle
1922
Installation of a telescope
1954
Repurchase by the State
1988
Acquisition by the municipality
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Louis XIV - King of France Use the castle for his natural son.
Louis Alexandre de Bourbon - Count of Toulouse Legitimate son of Louis XIV, staying here.
Léon Thomas - Parisian Bourgeois Sponsor of the present castle (1864-1866).
Gentilli di Giuseppe - Passionate Astronomy Installed a giant telescope in 1922.
Éric Pouchin - Landscape Redesigned the gardens in the 1990s.

Origin and history

The château du Haut-Buc, located in Buc in the Yvelines, was originally attached to the royal bailliage at the end of the seventeenth century. Integrated into the Grand Parc de Versailles, he served as Louis XIV to discreetly house his natural son, Louis Alexandre de Bourbon, Count of Toulouse, before his legitimation in 1681. The building was destroyed in 1740 by order of Louis XV, marking the end of his first existence.

Between 1864 and 1866, a new 19th-century castle was erected for Léon Thomas, a wealthy Parisian bourgeois. Acquired in 1893 by Noël Bardac, then in 1918 by Gentilli di Giuseppe — astronomer who installed a giant telescope there in 1922 — the estate changed hands several times. In 1929, it was purchased by the American couple Mac Cune, before being abandoned in 1939, then occupied by the German army during World War II.

The French state purchased the property in 1954 to make it a boarding school for the Lycée La Bruyère de Versailles. The commune of Buc became its owner in 1988 and undertook renovations in 2000. Part of the area has been home to the Franco-German High School in Buc since 1981. The castle, of three floors with an attic and a balcony style Louis XV, retains a 17th century guard lodge, the last vestige of the old construction.

The gardens, renovated in the 1990s by Éric Pouchin, house sculptures inspired by classical works, such as an allegory of the Air or a sphinx, as well as a canal. These spaces, today public, reflect the artistic and historical heritage of the site. The castle is also known for having inspired Edgar P. Jacobs in S.O.S. Meteors (1959), under the fictitious name of castle of Troussalet.

External links