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Merpins Castle en Charente

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Charente

Merpins Castle

    327-405 Rue du Château
    16100 Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Château de Merpins
Crédit photo : Pierre-alain dorange - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
Xe siècle
Stone reinforcement
1176
Taken by Richard Lion Heart
1204
Repurchase by Jean sans Terre
1242
Return to France
1360
Back to England
1387
Orderly destruction
1577
Resumed by the Duke of Mayenne
1973
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle (ruines) (Case E 214): inscription by order of 12 October 1973

Key figures

Charlemagne - Free Emperor (assumption) Assigned by oral tradition
Richard Cœur de Lion - Duke of Aquitaine Prist the castle in 1176
Philippe de Falcombridge - The illegitimate son of Richard Lord of Merpins (1180-1204)
Jean sans Terre - King of England Aceta and repair the fortress
Hugues X de Lusignan - Count of the March Receipt of Merpins from Henri III
Maréchal de Sancerre - French Commander Directed the seat of 1381-1387
Duc de Mayenne - Catholic leader Returned the castle in 1577

Origin and history

The castle of Merpins, built on a rocky spur overlooking the Charente, Ne and Antenne rivers, was a strategic fortress from the 10th century. Occupied since Neolithic, the site is said to have housed a Gallo-Roman mansio called Condate, although this hypothesis remains debated. Its location, less than 2 km from the Saintes-Perigueux route, made it a major checkpoint between Poitou and Aquitaine.

Tradition attributes its foundation to Charlemagne around 810 to counter Norman invasions, but no documentation confirms this origin. In 850 the Normans seized it according to oral accounts. In the 10th century, the châtellenia belonged to the Taillefer Counts of Angoulême. The castle, originally made of wood, was reinforced in stone between the 11th and 12th centuries, with the addition of a dungeon and a enclosure.

In 1176 Richard Cœur de Lion took Merpins and handed him over to his illegitimate son, Philippe de Falcombridge, husband of Amélie de Cognac. In 1204, John without Earth became the owner of the land after it was bought, and then passed it on to Hugues X de Lusignan. The fortress changed hands several times: taken over by France after Taillebourg (1242), returned to England by the Treaty of Bretigny (1360), then besieged and destroyed in 1387 by order of Charles VI after six years of siege led by the Marshal of Sancerre.

The Wars of Religion revived his military role: alternately occupied by Catholics and Protestants, he was finally taken over in 1577 by the Duke of Mayenne. The excavations of the 1970s revealed sophisticated defensive developments, such as a 30 m underground corridor dug in the rock, linking the ditch to the interior buildings. This passage, 3.50 m wide, included a staircase and a secret door 5 m below the current level.

Architecturally, the castral moth (60 x 40 m) was surrounded by walls and flanked by four towers, including a dungeon whose location remains uncertain. Between 1179 and the 13th century, the English added three towers, reinforced the ramparts and dug a dry moat. The barbacan housed a broken arch door of the 12th century, reflecting the defensive evolutions of the site. Today, the ruins, classified as Historical Monument in 1973, offer an overview of medieval military techniques.

External links