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Castle of Lorges à L'Hermitage-Lorge en Côtes-d'Armor

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Côtes-dArmor

Castle of Lorges

    Place de l'Église
    22150 L'Hermitage-Lorge
Château de Lorges
Château de Lorges
Château de Lorges
Château de Lorges
Château de Lorges
Crédit photo : Hace76 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1721–1740
Construction of the castle
XVIIIe siècle
Heritage by Choiseul-Praslin
26 juin 1963
Historical Monument
1978
Closing of forges
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The whole castle; in the west, terrace and water room with its banks; to the east, parterre said Esplanade and entrance pavilions on both sides of the road; to the north, lower yard and facades and roofs of the buildings that surround it on its four sides (cf. B 511 to 514, 525, 559, 561) : entry by order of 26 June 1963

Key figures

Guy-Nicolas de Durfort, duc de Lorges - Commander of the castle Great lord of the eighteenth century.
Famille Choiseul-Praslin - Owners and industrialists Operators of the Pas forges.
Madame Le Frottier de Kérilis - Royalist victim Killed in a caulian confrontation.

Origin and history

The castle of Lorges, located in the Côtes-d'Armor, was built between 1721 and 1740 by Guy-Nicolas de Durfort, Duke of Lorges, an aristocrat with a fascinating lifestyle. This imposing monument, characterized by its Mansart roofs and its soberly Breton granite facades, extends over a vast estate including terraces, water mirrors, and stables designed for 200 horses. The property then passed on to the Choiseul-Praslin family, which exploited the local iron ore to create the Pas forges, ensuring industrial activity until the 20th century.

During the French Revolution, the castle became the scene of a caulian drama: Madame Le Frottier de Kérilis, a royalist condemned to death, found refuge there with his sons after a bold escape. Hunted by the Blues, she and one of her children were killed there, leaving a legend of violence (a bloody perron is evoked and twenty dead). The site, uninhabited for two decades, still bears the trace of this tragic episode.

In the 19th century, the railway factory of the estate, modernized by the railway after 1880, survived as a foundry until its abrupt closure in 1978, victim of obsolete techniques and its isolation. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1963, the castle today preserves its architectural complex (central building, pavilions, commons, vegetable garden) and its landscape, witness to its seigneurial and industrial past.

The inscription in the Historical Monuments (26 June 1963) protects not only the castle, but also its surroundings: terraces, water rooms, esplanade, and lower courtyard. The protected elements reflect the Duke of Lorges' desire to create an autarchic estate, where architectural prestige and economic ambition combine between mining and agriculture (large vegetable garden, monumental stables).

External links