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Château du Lude à Jouy-le-Potier dans le Loiret

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château

Château du Lude

    Route de Ligny
    45370 Jouy-le-Potier
Private property

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
500
600
700
800
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Ve siècle
Christianization of the Cornelia fountain
726
First written mention of Lude
XIIe siècle
Construction of dungeon
1429
Transition to the La Rable family
1562-1563
Seated by Coligny
1860
Demolition of the dungeon
1945
Classification of the fleet
19 novembre 2002
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The platform; facades and roofs of the castle (cad. C 155): registration by order of 19 November 2002

Key figures

Saint-Aignan - Bishop of Orléans (Vth century) Christianize the Cornelia fountain in Saint Corneille.
Herbert de Beauvilliers - Lord of Lude (XII century) Pusher of the castle in 1115.
Gaspard II de Coligny - Admiral of France (XVI century) Seat and damage the castle.
Maurice Bastide du Lude - Artist and owner (1893-1960) Restores the castle and installs its workshop.
Henri Rapine - Diocesan architect (late 19th century) Leads historical restorations.
Georges Le Breton - Landscaper (1896) Designs the park around the castle.

Origin and history

The Château du Lude, located in Jouy-le-Potier (Loiret), has its origins in an ancient occupation: a Gallo-Roman villa was built on stilts near the Orléans-Limoges route. In the fifth century, a fountain dedicated to Druidic divinity Cornelia, Christianized in Saint Corneille by the bishop of Orleans Saint-Aignan, marks the site. A document of 726 already mentions Le Lude, linked to the defense against the Saracens by Charles Martel. The seigneury passed into the hands of the Beauvilliers family in the 11th century, which erected a dungeon in the 12th century and participated in the Crusades.

In the 15th century, Jean de La Rable rebuilt the castle in Renaissance style while preserving the medieval dungeon. The site became a popular hunting site for Louis XI and Jean de Dunois. During the Wars of Religion (1562-1563), Admiral de Coligny, Huguenot chief, seated the castle and destroyed the dungeon, symbol of the Catholic power of the Beauvilliers. In 1654, the property was first sold to the Egrot family of La Borde, treasurer of France in Orléans. The 1789 Revolution saw the destruction of the pigeon tree, a feudal symbol.

In the 19th century, the castle was acquired by the Gayot family of Bastide, which undertook important restorations. Around 1860, the dungeon was demolished, but its stones were used to build a neo-gothic chapel for the local inhabitants. From 1893 to 1960, the artist Maurice Bastide du Lude made it a place of creation, restaurant the farm in workshop with architect Léon Masson. The park, classified in 1945, and the castle, listed as historic monuments in 2002, bear witness to this centuries-old history.

The architecture combines medieval elements (doves, poterne) and Renaissance or historicist additions (sculpted lucarns, chapel). The landscaped park, designed by Georges Le Breton in 1896, completes a collection of 17th century commons, orangery and stables. The annual pilgrimage to Saint Corneille, patron saint of Sologne, continues a tradition linked to the Gallo-Roman fountain.

The sources stress the strategic importance of Lude, a crossroads between Orléans and Limousin, as well as its role in religious conflicts and aristocratic networks (Beauvilliers, Valois, Courtenay). The restorations of the 19th century, although critical from a historical point of view, preserved this emblematic heritage of the Centre-Val de Loire.

External links