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Château du Marais in Gimouille dans la Nièvre

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Nièvre

Château du Marais in Gimouille

    Ferme du Marais
    58470 Gimouille
Crédit photo : Christian Deschenes - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1424
Acquisition by Le Tort
XIVe siècle
Initial construction
1470
Defensive reinforcement
1517
Consecration of the chapel
1605
Purchase by Henry Bolacre
14 mai 1927
Registration for historical monuments
années 1970
Partial restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château du Marais: inscription by order of 14 May 1927

Key figures

Jehan de Boisgibault - Lord and knight First known lord, active around 1400.
Dreux Le Tort - Nevers account manager Lord in 1448, close to Count Charles of Burgundy.
Jean Le Tort - Lord and builder Obtained permission to strengthen the castle in 1470.
Henry Bolacre - Lieutenant-General of Nivernais Acquire the castle in 1605 for 25,000 pounds.
Augustin Conrade - Italian potter Introduced the art of faience to Nevers in the seventeenth century.
Henri Bolacre - Presidual Commissioner Spouse of Gabrielle Conrade in 1691, owner of the Marais.

Origin and history

The Marais Castle, located in the Loire Valley in Gimouille (Nièvre), is a medieval building built in the 14th century on the site of an old fortified house. It was modified in the 15th century to strengthen its defences, notably by the addition of a drawbridge authorized in 1470 by Jean de Clamecy, Count of Nevers. Its still visible moat and its two contrasting facades (North flanked by 14th century round towers, South with a rectangular pavilion and a square tower) testify to its architectural evolution.

The seigneury of the Marais changed hands frequently: acquired by the Le Tort, family of jurists close to the Counts of Nevers, in 1424, it then passed to the Bolacre (1605), to the Conrades (17th century, Italian artisans of faience), then to the Dupin (1722). In the 18th century, the castle belonged to the Chery, La Rochefoucault-Couse, and finally to the Montrichard until 2000, when it was bought by the Graillot family. Its interior preserves a chapel blessed in 1517, defensive elements (cannons, assumer) and traces of reshuffles of the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries.

The castle was listed as a historical monument on 14 May 1927 for its heritage interest. Its present structure combines the remains of the 14th and 16th centuries, with partial restorations (such as the West Gallery rebuilt in the 1970s from elements of the castle of the Eperon). The commons also house a house of the 15th century and a dovecote of the 16th century, emphasizing its role as a seigneurial domain throughout the eras.

The archives mention emblematic lords such as Jehan de Boisgibault (chevalier circa 1400), Dreux Le Tort (master of accounts of Nevers in 1448), or Henri Bolacre (lieutenant général du Bailliage du Nivernais in 1605). The Conrade family, introduced by the Duke of Gonzague to develop faience in Nevers, also marked its history. The castle thus illustrates the links between seigneurial power, economic activities (faience) and architectural transformations in Nivernais.

External links