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Château du Nozet dans la Nièvre

Nièvre

Château du Nozet

    1215 Le Château du Nozet
    58150 Saint-Andelain

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1234
Donation to Benedictines
1651
Reconstruction of the castle
1798
Acquisition by Lafond
1914-1918
Auxiliary Hospital 17
milieu XIXe siècle
Revival reconstruction
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Humbault le Blanc - Former Lord Dona seigneury to the Benedictines in 1234.
Étienne Louis Lafond - Acquirer in 1798 Negotiating in wines having bought the national good.
Comte Lafont de la Doucette - Owner in the 19th century Sponsor of neo-Renaissance reconstruction.
Baron Patrick de Ladoucette - Liver (1972) Developed Pouilly's wine culture.

Origin and history

Château du Nozet is a building located in Pouilly-sur-Loire, in the Nièvre department, in the Burgundy-Franche-Comté region. Built at the bottom of a valley leading to the Loire, it controlled an ancient Roman road on the right bank of the river. The site, mentioned in 1234, was given to the Benedictines of La Charité-sur-Loire by Humbault le Blanc before his departure in the crusade. The monks thus became temporal lords of Pouilly. The castle, several times rebuilt, today retains only its southern and eastern wings, with architectural elements neo-Renaissance added in the 19th century for Count Lafont de la Doucette.

The estate was nationalized during the Revolution before being acquired in 1798 by Étienne Louis Lafond, who traded in Parisian wines. In the 19th century, the castle adopted a neo-Renaissance style, marked by mâchicoulis towers, pepper roofs and L-shaped houses. During the First World War, he served as an auxiliary hospital (n°17) for the French Red Cross, receiving 20 to 40 wounded between August 1914 and June 1918. In 1972, Baron Patrick de Ladoucette, heir to the family, devoted himself to local viticulture, particularly that of Pouilly.

The current remains include two bodies of rectangular houses, round towers at northeast and southeast angles, and a corbelled turret. The 1839 cadastre attested to an initial right-of-way of 50 m by 40 m, now reduced. The castle thus illustrates a history combining seigneurial power, successive reconstructions and adaptations to military and wine needs.

External links