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Bouzols Castle à Arsac-en-Velay en Haute-Loire

Haute-Loire

Bouzols Castle

    2 Place du Four
    43700 Arsac-en-Velay
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Château de Bouzols
Crédit photo : Eponimm - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
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
1046
First Lord attested
1191
Death of Géraud de Bouzols
1399
Royal Headquarters
1621
Sale to Montagu
1876
Restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle of Bouzols, its terraces, the chapel, the house of the Intendant, the stables and the house Allirol, in total, located on plots no. 40, 43, 46, 47, 48 and 840, appearing in the cadastre section B: inscription by order of 2 October 2015

Key figures

Ithier de Mercœur - First known lord Receipt of Bouzols in feef (1046)
Géraud de Bouzols - Cross Lord Death at Saint John d'Acre (1191)
Raymond de Turenne - Viscount and rebel Headquarters of 1399 against Charles VI
Catherine de Bouzols - Inheritance Transferred the castle to the Polignac (1300)
Albert de Brive - Restaurant restaurant Safeguard work (1876)

Origin and history

The castle of Bouzols, built in the ninth century on a volcanic neck at 830 m above sea level, was owned by the lords of Mercœur from 1046. Ithier de Mercœur, the first certified lord, received the land in fiefdom from his uncle Stephen II, bishop of Puy. His son Renaud enlarged the estate by his marriage to Beatrix de Brive, heir to the neighboring seigneury. The line continued with Hugues, then Bernard, who paid homage to Bishop Humbert of Grenoble in 1137.

In the 12th century, Géraud de Bouzols, guilty of the murder of a canon, went on a crusade and died at the siege of Saint-Jean-d-Acre (1191). His daughter Guillemine married Jaucerand of Saint-Romain, who rebuilt the castle before dying in the Holy Land (1223). The seigneury then passed to the Polignacs by the marriage of Catherine de Bouzols with Armand V in 1300. In the 14th century, the castle became property of Beaufort via Cardinal Hugues Roger, then Raymond de Turenne, who resisted a royal siege in 1399.

In the 15th century, the castle was transferred to the Tower of Oliergues after judicial conflicts. During the Wars of Religion (16th century), it was the scene of confrontations before being sold in 1621 to the Montagu, who kept it until the Revolution. Abandoned in the 18th century, it was restored from 1876 by Albert de Brive, descendant of the buyers of 1808. The chapel of Saint-Eustache, rebuilt in the 15th century, preserves Romanesque elements like a carved decoration of the Crucifixion.

Architecturally, the castle combines a 9th-century dungeon, a house from the 14th to 16th centuries, renovated in the 19th century, and defensive remains (archeries, stone balls). The south terrace, built in the 16th-17th centuries, precedes the body of houses pierced with troubadour-style windows. A tank dug in the rock and a murated cavalier door testify to medieval developments. Ranked a Historic Monument in 1926, then in 2015 for its ensemble (chapel, terraces, stables), it remains private property.

The site, strategic in the upper Loire valley, illustrates the evolution of medieval fortresses into seigneurial residences. The task marks on the 13th century tower and the 1399 balls recall its military role, while the Renaissance and 19th century transformations reflect its adaptation to later eras. Today, Bouzols Castle, still inhabited, embodies nearly twelve centuries of Velayan history.

External links