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House of the Grand Mercoras in Ruffieux en Savoie

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Maison forte
Savoie

House of the Grand Mercoras in Ruffieux

    D991 
    73310 Ruffieux
Crédit photo : Anne des alpes - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
0
100
1300
1400
1500
1900
2000
1795 (an III)
Sale as a national good
1370
First certified statement
XIVe siècle
Initial construction
1500
Death of Hugonin de Montfalcon
1591
Death of Jean de Montfalcon
6 novembre 1969
Registration for Historic Monuments
1986
Restoration of the turret
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs (Case F 96): inscription by decree of 6 November 1969

Key figures

Henry de Montfalcon - Lord of Flaxieu (1370) First certified owner of the Grand Mercoras.
Hugonin de Montfalcon - Ecuyer de Yolande de France Died in Turin in 1500.
Jean de Montfalcon - Governor of Savoie (died 1591) Last lord before inheritance transmission.
Andréanne de Breuil - Widow of Jean de Montfalcon Retired to the castle after 1591.
Claude Girod - Acquirer in 1795 Purchase as a post-Revolution national good.
Paul Feuga - Lyon Industrial (1964) Descendant of the Girod-Montfalcon, restores the castle.

Origin and history

The fortress of the Grand Mercoras, located in Ruffieux en Savoie, dates from the 14th century and was the heart of the seigneury of Mécoras in the Middle Ages. It originally belonged to the Montfalcon family, established in Chautagne since the 11th century. The site, with its outbuildings (Petit Mécoras and Château de Lapeyrouse), depended on the château of Chautagne. In 1370 Henry de Montfalcon, lord of Flaxieu by marriage, was the first certified owner. His descendants, including Hugonin (the squire of Yolande de France, who died in 1500) and Georges (the husband of Anne de Conzié), succeeded each other until the 16th century. On the death of François de Montfalcon, the castle passed to his nephew Louis, then to Andréanne de Breuil, widow of Jean de Montfalcon (Governor of Savoie, died in 1591).

Confiscated in the Revolution, the house was sold as a national property in 1795 to Claude Girod, whose family preserved it until the 20th century. In 1920, it was acquired by its farmers, then in 1964 by Paul Feuga, a Lyon industrialist descendant of the Girod-Montfalcon, who restored it. The monument, partially inscribed in the Historical Monuments in 1969, consists of a quadrangular enclosure, a 15th century house body enlarged to the 16th century, and a polygonal turret housing a spiral staircase. Communes, built in 1607, complete the whole, once surrounded by orchards, vineyards and a chapel.

Architecturally, the fort house combines defense and habitat: shingles windows, tufa stone fire openings, and regional flat tile roofs. The lower broken arch entrance door and the turret (recast in 1986) reflect successive adaptations. The site illustrates the evolution of Savoyard fortified houses, moving from a seigneurial place of power to a rural residence, while retaining military elements characteristic of the Late Middle Ages.

External links