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Castle à Maillebois dans l'Eure-et-Loir

Eure-et-Loir

Castle

    6 Le Château
    28170 Maillebois
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Crédit photo : Marcengel - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1425
Fire by the English
1621
Erection in marquisat
XVe–XVIe siècles
Reconstruction by the family
1679–1721
Expansions by Nicolas Desmarets
1798
Sale as a national good
1882
Construction of stables by Latham
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle: inscription by decree of 22 December 1941 - Façades and roofs of buildings of the communes located on either side of the forecourt to the exclusion of the modified parts of the facade of the building is overlooking an inner courtyard (Box AC 5, 8): inscription by decree of 17 May 1974 - Parts of stables not yet included in the additional inventory of historic monuments (Cd. AC 8, placed le Château): inscription by order of 16 October 2000

Key figures

Jean d’Ô - Lord and Rebuilder Rebuilds the castle after 1425, adds the chapel.
François d’Ô - Superintendent of Finance Enlarges the castle under Henry III, dies in debt.
Nicolas Desmarets - Comptroller General of Finance Large park and castle, moves a suburb.
Charles-François Tardieu de Maleissye - Viscount and restorer Demolishes two towers, unifies the facades in the 19th century.
Lionel-Henri Latham - Owner and patron Constructed the stables in 1882, modernized the estate.
Marie-Christine-Chrétienne de Rouvroy de Saint-Simon - Countess of Valentinois Owner before the Revolution, controversial legatee.

Origin and history

The castle of Maillebois, located in the Thymerais in Eure-et-Loir, finds its origins in the Middle Ages as a fortress controlling the passage between Île-de-France and Normandy. Fired by the English in 1425, it was rebuilt on its medieval foundations by the family of O in the 15th and 16th centuries. John d The castle then passed into the hands of Nicolas Harlay de Sancy, then the Camus de Jambville, who erected the estate as a marquisat in 1621.

In the 17th century, Nicolas Desmarets, Colbert's nephew and chief financial officer, acquired Maillebois and expanded considerably. It moves a whole suburb of Blévy to expand the park, incorporating rivers and radiant alleys. His son, the Marshal of Maillebois, closed the park and further embellished the castle. During the Revolution, the estate became a national property: requisitioned, inventoried, then sold in 1798 to François-Marie-Simon Pâris de Mainvilliers, who could not complete the purchase. The Duchess of Fitz-James, who returned from exile in 1801, purchased the castle before reselling it in 1807.

In the 19th century, the Viscount Charles-François Tardieu de Maleissye, royalist and former emigrant, partially restored the castle by demolishing two old towers and unifying the facades. He left the estate to his son in 1848. In 1880 Lionel-Henri Latham, heir to a dynasty of Protestant traders, acquired Maillebois and modernized the stables (1882), using local materials (silex, polychrome bricks, marble). His grandson, Lionel Armand-Delille, still lives in the castle in the 20th century. The park, communes and stables, classified as historical monuments between 1941 and 2000, bear witness to this turbulent history.

The architecture of the castle combines medieval, Renaissance and classical styles. The south facade, decorated with geometric patterns in varnished bricks, contrasts with the sobriety of the north facade. The communes, built by Desmarets, frame a forecourt where remains traces of pigeons and dependencies of origin. The park, designed in the 17th century, preserves its historical aisles (such as the "foot of the goose") and its landscaped elements (river, cooler, haha). Inside, Louis XV woodwork, tapestries of the Perseus wedding (floured in 1984) and objects inherited from successive owners decorated the rooms.

The Château de Maillebois was also used as a setting for cultural events, such as the Art and Clochers exhibition in 2024 or the filming of the show Le Meilleur Pâtissier (M6) in 2016. Today, the estate remains the property of the Armand-Delille family, descendant of the Latham, and partially visits, highlighting its preserved architectural and landscape heritage.

External links