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Scharrachbergheim Castle à Scharrachbergheim-Irmstett dans le Bas-Rhin

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Bas-Rhin

Scharrachbergheim Castle

    92 Rue du Château
    67310 Scharrachbergheim-Irmstett
Château de Scharrachbergheim
Château de Scharrachbergheim
Crédit photo : Denis Helfer - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1527
Date engraved on cart door
XVe siècle
Presumed initial construction
1673
Certified restoration
1727
Restoration work
1845
Wooden staircase added
1870
Acquisition by Louis Schutzenberger
1982
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs (Case D 378) : inscription by decree of 8 March 1982

Key figures

Baron du Hazier - Owner and restaurant Responsible for work around 1845-1850.
Louis Schutzenberger - Painter and owner (1870-1885) Turn the knights' room into a workshop.
Charles Frédéric Mewès - Architect owner The son of Frédéric Mewès, heir to the castle.
Charles-Philippe Leopold - Baron owner Noble family who owned the estate.

Origin and history

Scharrachbergheim Castle, located in Scharrachbergheim-Irmstett in Lower Rhine, is a building probably dating back to the 15th century, after the destruction of a previous castle on the Scharrach hill. Its rustic stone walls, visible on the north and east facades, bear witness to this medieval period. The site, surrounded by a ditch and with four truncated-angle turrets, adopted a U-shaped plan attested by 1839, although architectural changes took place in the 18th and 19th centuries, notably under the impetus of the Hazier Baron.

The castle experienced several phases of restoration, as in 1673 (dated window), in 1727, then in the middle of the 19th century, where the Baron du Hazier added a wooden staircase signed Duquemy (1845) and reused 17th century cabinets for the interior chambranles. Damaged during the Thirty Years' War, he passed into the hands of influential families, including the Leopolds in the 18th century, before being acquired in 1870 by the painter Louis Schutzenberger. The latter transformed the grand hall of the 16th century into a workshop and decorated the sites with mural paintings, before yielding the estate in 1885 to the merchant Frédéric Mewès, including the son, architect Charles Frédéric Mewès (famous for the Ritz in Paris), in inheritance.

Ranked a Historic Monument since 1982 for its facades and roofs, the castle retains defensive elements such as a shooting slot in the northeast turret and an old drawbridge replaced by a dormant bridge. The communes, perpendicular to the barn-stable, date back to the 16th century, while the park, of recent creation, houses lapidary elements reported. Traces of re-use, such as the lintel engraved 1530 on the west wing or the 1527 marked carriageway door (often read wrongly as 1727), highlight its complex architectural evolution.

In the 20th century, the castle remained in the descendants of Charles Edouard Mewès, Alsatian and Parisian architect (1889-1968). Its history reflects the social and artistic changes of Alsace, between medieval heritage, noble transformations in the 17th and 18th centuries, and residential or creative vocation in the 19th and 20th centuries. Today, it embodies a hybrid heritage, mixing defense, seigneurial habitat and bourgeois place of life.

External links