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Monteton Castle dans le Lot-et-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Lot-et-Garonne

Monteton Castle

    26 Rue du Château
    47120 Monteton
Château de Monteton
Château de Monteton
Château de Monteton
Château de Monteton
Château de Monteton
Crédit photo : Jacques MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1623
Founding marriage
1685
Revocation of the Edit of Nantes
début XVIIIe siècle
Transformation of the castle
1835
Change of ownership
8 février 2008
Registration historical monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The house in its entirety, the inner courtyard, the facades and roofs of the communes, the enclosure and its slope (the enclosure against which the commons are supported) , the ramp of access to the central body and the dry ditch that it spans (see Box. B 80 (logis, courtyard, ramp, commons) , 74 (premises stall) , 79 (dry crack) , adjoining wall between B 74 and B 80): inscription by order of 8 February 2008

Key figures

Jeanne de Béraud - Lady of Monteton Wife of Charles de Digeon in 1623.
Charles de Digeon - Lord of Peyrières Founder of the Monteton Digeon line.
Jean-Jacques Digeon de Monteton - Lord and Father of Philip Married to Suzanne de Narbonne-Pelet.
Philippe Digeon de Monteton - Colonel and Deputy Son of Jean-Jacques, MP in 1815.
Léopold de Gervain - Post-Digeon Owner Heir in 1835, restorer of the castle.
Anne de Briquemaut - Widow of Pierre de Digeon Usufructuary seized after emigration.

Origin and history

Monteton Castle, located in the Lot-et-Garonne department, was built in the 17th century on the bases of a Romanesque building. It belonged to the seigneury of Monteton, passed in 1623 to the Digeon family (or Dijon) by the marriage of Jeanne de Béraud with Charles de Digeon, Sieur de Peyrières. This Protestant line, converted in appearance after the revocation of the edict of Nantes (1685), marked the architecture of the castle with defensive elements such as an arrowed drawbridge, reflecting the religious tensions of the time.

At the beginning of the 18th century, a member of the Digeon de Monteton family transformed the castle to bring it more in line with the comfort standards of the time. The family, divided between a branch in France and another exile in Prussia (now Digeon von Monteton), retained the estate until 1835. The castle, with a U-shaped plan with a central body and two wings, included commons and a fortified enclosure. Its abandonment in the 20th century led to its partial degradation, before a restoration and its conversion into an inn.

The monument was listed in the Inventory of Historic Monuments on February 8, 2008 for its home, inner courtyard, commons, and enclosure. His story is linked to figures such as Jean-Jacques Digeon de Monteton, married to Suzanne de Narbonne-Pelet, whose son Philippe, Colonel and then Member of Parliament for Lot-et-Garonne (from 1815) marked local history. The castle thus illustrates the survival strategies of Protestant families under the Old Regime, between forced conversion and exile.

The architecture of the castle, with its traces of drawbridge and its murderers, bears witness to the duality between Catholic appearance and persistent Protestant practice after 1685. The seizure of the property of certain members of the family, such as those of Anne de Briquemaut (widow of Pierre de Digeon) or Henry Digeon de Boisverdun, reflects the consequences of exile. After 1835, the castle changed hands, passing to Léopold de Gervain, who restored the castle of Lasserre but left Monteton abandoned.

Today, Monteton Castle, partially restored, houses a hostel. Its inscription as Historic Monument protects its emblematic elements, including the dry ditch, the access ramp, and the facades of the communes. Historical sources, such as Jules de Bourrousse de Laffore or Lucile Bourrachot's work, underline its importance in understanding the Protestant nobility of the Agenas and its European networks.

External links