Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Davayat Castle dans le Puy-de-Dôme

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Puy-de-Dôme

Davayat Castle

    2-6 Rue Saint-Mary 
    63200 Davayat
Private property
Château de Davayat
Château de Davayat
Château de Davayat
Crédit photo : Rémi de Saulieu - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1595
Construction of initial pavilion
vers 1640
Redevelopment by Amable Valeix
1658
Heritage by Amable Valeix
1707
Decommissioning of the chapel
XVIIIe siècle
Purchase by Dutour family
milieu XIXe siècle
Transformation of the park to English
2006
Historical Monument
XXe siècle
Restoration of the French garden
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle, as well as its chapel, the pavilion of the refractory priest, the southern communes and the garden with its hydraulic system, its lions, its greenhouse, its pergola, its fences and its portal of honor (cf. A 790, 791, 1225, 1339, 1343): registration by order of 20 March 2006

Key figures

Blaise Roze - Riomese trader Manufacturer of the original flag (1595).
Amable Valeix - Tanning merchant and consul of Riom Redesigned the castle around 1640.
Guillaume Valeix - Lawyer and President in the election of Riom Son of Amable, sold the estate.
Claude Dutour - Ecuyer secretary of the king Master of the castle in the 18th century.
Claude-François-Marie Attiret - Suspected architect Probable East Wing Author.
Raymond de Bar - Military Commander and Deputy Owner in the 19th century, legatee of the castle.
Jacques de Saulieu - Current owner (family) Husband of Germaine de Bar, heiress.

Origin and history

Davayat Castle, located in Limagne near Riom (Puy-de-Dôme), finds its origins at the end of the 16th century with the construction of a pavilion by Blaise Roze, a rich riomese merchant. Around 1640, Amable Valeix, a tanner and consul of Riom, inherited the estate in 1658 and undertook major redevelopments, transforming the pavilion into a classic gentilhommière. The main body, lying on six spans and three levels, incorporates decorative elements such as a pediment oculus decorated with ball, typical of the Louis XIII style. A first French-style garden is probably built during this period.

In the 18th century, the castle passed to the Dutour family, recently anoblique, via Claude Dutour, squire secretary of the king, whose coat of arms still appears on the facade. The expansion projects (two wings in return) remain unfinished: only the East wing, attributed to the architect Claude-François-Marie Attiret, is carried out. This wing has a doric portico with five columns supporting a balustrade terrace, while on the upper floor, oval occults remind Chinese influences. The garden, structured in large aisles, is enclosed by a iron gate decorated with shields.

In the 19th century, the estate was an alliance between the Bar family and the Saulieus, still owners today. Raymond de Bar, commander of the army and deputy under the Third Republic, left the castle to his niece Germaine, wife of Jacques de Saulieu. The park, transformed in English in the middle of the 19th century, found a French drawing in the 20th century thanks to the milled landscaper Treyve (or Trier). Among the notable outbuildings are a chapel disused in 1707 but restored in 1837, a "flag of the refractory priest" sheltered a cleric during the Revolution, as well as a greenhouse and an ancient pergola.

Ranked a Historic Monument in 2006, the castle houses collections of objects (Mary Antoinette's furniture, fans, Tanagra figurines) and a 17th century library. The five-hectare park, adorned with a quadricentennial yew, Volvic stone lions and a basin, illustrates the evolution of landscape tastes. The 18th wing, with its medallion terrace and colonnade, bears witness to the unfinished aristocratic fascist.

The tours allow you to discover the furnished apartments, the communes (grange, orangery, stable) and the historical hydraulic system. The castle, symbol of Limugnon heritage, blends bourgeois heritage, eclectic architectural influences and revolutionary memory, while remaining an active family property.

External links