Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Donjon de Montessus à Changy en Saône-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Donjons
Saône-et-Loire

Donjon de Montessus à Changy

    D 10
    71120 Changy
Crédit photo : PHILDIC - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1900
2000
1440
Change of ownership
XIVe siècle
Initial construction
1487
Marriage Léonarde Sarrazin and Hugues Bernard
1957
Transmission by inheritance
4 septembre 2006
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castral complex with all the components of the plate of the old domain as it was delimited in the old cadastral plans: buildings in elevation, soils of plots and basements, including access alleys and the station (cad. AE 44, 47 to 53): by order of 4 September 2006

Key figures

Famille de Rabutin - First known owners The original Macon family of the castle.
Famille Trezettes - Owners in the fourteenth century Acquire the castle after the Rabutin.
Léonarde Sarrazin - Inheritance by marriage Wife Hugues Bernard in 1487.
Hugues Bernard - New owner in 1487 Founded the Bernard de Montessus line.
Famille Bernard de Montessus - Owners until 1957 Keeps the castle for nearly 5 centuries.
Famille de la Cropte de Chanterac - Owners since 1957 Current heirs by family transmission.

Origin and history

The Montessus dungeon, located in Changy in Saône-et-Loire, is an emblematic monument of the medieval military architecture of Charolais. Built mainly in the 14th and 15th centuries, it consists of a quadrangular tower with a roof in the pavilion and flanked by four circular scalds. A house body is attached to the main tower, while a circular tower to the south houses a chapel and a dovecote. The ensemble, surrounded by a stationer mentioned from the 16th century, bears witness to architectural transformations until the 17th century.

The castle was successively owned by local noble families. Originally owned by the Macon family of Rabutin, it passed to the Trezettes in the 14th century, then to the Sarrazin around 1440. In 1487, by the marriage of Léonarde Sarrazin with Hugues Bernard, the estate belonged to the Bernard de Montcenis family, newly anoblated. The latter, which became Bernard de Montessus, retained the castle until 1957, when it was handed over by inheritance to the family of the Cropte de Chanterac. The Bernard de Montessus family also owns the nearby castles of Rully and Ballore.

Ranked a historic monument since September 4, 2006, the site includes buildings, floors, basements and the park, according to old cadastral plans. Although not open to the public, an association, Friends of the Montessus site, works for its preservation, its cultural outreach and the promotion of traditional local breeding. The dungeon, perched on a hill overlooking the Arconce Valley, remains a symbol of Burgundian and Charoese castral heritage.

External links