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Rest of the castle à Vaour dans le Tarn

Tarn

Rest of the castle

    348 Route du Château
    81140 Vaour
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Restes du château
Crédit photo : KaTeznik - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1900
2000
1140
Templar Foundation
1303
Support for Philippe le Bel
1312
Dissolution of Templars
1910
Falling dungeon
1927
Historical classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle (rests): inscription by order of 13 July 1927

Key figures

Pierre Humbert - Knight and Prior First Commander in 1143.
Fort Sans - Bailmaster Dirigea Vaour and Montricoux (1174-1192).
Bernard de la Roche - Vaour Commander Support to Philip the Bel in 1303.
Hugues de Pairaud - Visitor from France Templar representative in 1303.
Gaillard de Pradines - Commander Dirigea Vaour, Montricoux, La Capelle (1248).

Origin and history

The command office of Vaour, located in the Tarn 80 km northeast of Toulouse, was founded in 1140 by the knights of Penne, who gave land to Pierre Humbert. This templar site, surrounded by a trapezoidal wall, housed about ten knights, while other outbuildings (Montricoux, Cahors, Lacapelle-Livron) completed their network. The Templars, exempt from taxes in exchange for the protection of the premises, extended their power over seven cantons and the Quercy, thanks to the donations of the religious of Septfonds, Chancelade and the Count of Toulouse.

In 1303, Commander Bernard de la Roche supported Philip the Bel in his conflict against Pope Boniface VIII, marking the political involvement of the commandary. After the dissolution of the Order of the Temple in 1312, the site passed to the Hospitallers of St John of Jerusalem, who kept it until the Revolution. The organization of the place included a church on the ground floor of the dungeon (20 m high, now collapsed in 1910), a barn with foothills, and common areas such as the kitchen and dining room. An octagonal tower provided access to the Commander's apartments.

Ranked a historical monument in 1927, the commandory illustrates the Templar architecture: sacred hill (a guttered hill suggesting a water cult), fortified enclosures, and utility buildings. Today, the restored barn hosts shows run by the association Summer of Vaour. The site also preserves traces of neighboring Templar possessions (Marnaves, Lintin, monastery of Amarens) and archives such as the Cartular of the Templars of Vaour (1894).

External links