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Castle of Sigy-le-Châtel en Saône-et-Loire

Saône-et-Loire

Castle of Sigy-le-Châtel

    193 Rue du Chateau
    71250 Sigy-le-Châtel

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Xe siècle
First written entry
1203
Lordship of Renaud de Luzy
XIIe siècle
Reconstruction of the castle
1535
Acquisition by the Magdeleine
XVIIe siècle
Abandonment of the castle
1794
Execution of the last lord
2010
Creation of the theatre festival
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Renaud de Luzy - Lord of Sigy Certified in 1203 as owner.
Girard de la Magdeleine - Baill of Auxois Acquire the castle in 1535.
Philibert de La Guiche - Lord of Sigy Beneficiary of the Decree of 1604.
Louis-Emmanuel d'Angoulême - Heir of Charles IX Husband of Marie-Henriette de La Guiche.
Amable-Charles de La Guiche - Last Lord of Sigy Guillotiné in 1794.
Anne-Laure Descombins - Founder of the festival Creation of the event in 2010.

Origin and history

The castle of Sigy-le-Châtel, located in Saône-et-Loire on a rocky spur overlooking a pass, is one of the oldest in Mâconnais. Its origins date back to at least the tenth century, when it was first mentioned in writing. Originally, it was girded with an irregular enclosure reinforced with thick courtines, with a north entrance protected by two hemicylindrical towers. Today, nothing remains but fragments: panels of walls, bases of circular towers pierced by archères-canonniers, and a medieval building angle with a scauguette. A chapel, six of which were rediscovered in 1975, was once completed together.

Over the centuries, Sigy's fief changed hands several times, reflecting regional power games. In the 11th century it was divided between the Sires of Bourbon and the family of Luzy, with Renaud de Luzy attested as lord in 1203. A reconstruction took place in the 12th century, before the estate passed to the Sauzet by marriage in 1266, then to the Marzé, Trezettes, and finally to the family of La Magdeleine in 1535. The castle experienced its decline in the seventeenth century after its abandonment by the Valois-Angoulême, heirs to Charles IX, before returning to the La Guiche. The last lord, Amable-Charles de La Guiche, was guillotineed in 1794.

Private property not open to the public, since 2010 the site hosts an annual theatre festival, initiated by Anne-Laure Descombins and Tao Zemzemi. This cultural event, organized on the first weekend of August, revives the ruins by integrating them into artistic programming. The remains, though fragmentary, offer a rare testimony of medieval castral architecture in Burgundy-Franche-Comté, marked by defensive adaptations (archères-canonniers) and traces of seigneurial life (chapelle, écauguette).

External links