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Ruins of Jovelle Castle à La Tour-Blanche en Dordogne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort

Ruins of Jovelle Castle

    35 Jovelle
    24320 La Tour-Blanche-Cercles
Private property
Château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Ruines du château de Jovelle
Crédit photo : Père Igor - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIIe-XIVe siècle
Initial construction
XIVe siècle
Occupation by the Black Prince
XVe siècle
Charles VII headquarters
XVIIe siècle
Home renovations
1789 (Rvolution française)
Partial destruction of ramparts
24 juin 1948
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château de Jovelle (ruines of) (Box B 549): inscription by order of 24 June 1948

Key figures

Prince Noir - English military chief Stayed briefly (legend).
Charles VII - King of France It establishes its headquarters.

Origin and history

The castle of Jovelle, located on a rocky promontory at 144 meters above sea level near La Tour-Blanche (Dordogne), is a castle whose origins date back to the 13th and 14th centuries. Its ruins, partially masked by vegetation, include a fortified entrance châtelet, a square corner tower with remains of machicoulis, and a renovated house in the 17th century. The Romanesque chapel, vaulted by a broken cradle with canonary arches, overlooks the site and preserves an axial Gothic bay. The ramparts, almost disappeared, remain only around the southern courtyard, where a 17th-century well testifies to late developments.

During the Hundred Years War, the castle would have welcomed the Black Prince for a short period, according to a local legend. In the 15th century, he served as headquarters at Charles VII for four months, highlighting his strategic role. At the time of the Revolution, part of the ramparts was destroyed, reducing the building to its present state: a set of ruins protected since 1948, including the castral chapel, commons and defensive elements like full archeries.

The site, a private property, illustrates medieval military architecture with its traces of machicolis, its mural chimneys in the ruined south wing, and its corridor serving the chapel's defence chamber. The noble families associated with the castle – Dejean de Jovelle, de La Croix and de Galard-Béarn – were successive owners. Today, the vestiges, though fragmentary, offer an overview of the transformations undergone from the Middle Ages to the modern era, between residential, religious and defensive functions.

External links