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Corbeil-Cerf Castle dans l'Oise

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Oise

Corbeil-Cerf Castle

    Route Sans Nom
    60110 Corbeil-Cerf
Château de Corbeil-Cerf
Château de Corbeil-Cerf
Château de Corbeil-Cerf
Château de Corbeil-Cerf
Château de Corbeil-Cerf
Crédit photo : Chatsam - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVIe–XVIIe siècles
Initial construction
1960
Creation of enclosed gardens
15 septembre 1966
Partial classification
31 août 1992
Registration of sets
24 octobre 1994
Extended classification
Fin XIXe–début XXe siècle
Lubersac renovation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs of the castle and the old press (Box B 11): classification by decree of 15 September 1966; Interior decorations of the vestibule (stairs with its guardrail) , the dining room (trimming), the living room (woodhouses and built-in paintings) and the library (woodhouses) (Box B 11): inscription by order of 31 August 1992 ; 17th century pavilion located at the northeast corner of the vegetable garden; park and fence wall of the castle (cad. B 10, 12, 13): Order of 24 October 1994

Key figures

Marquis de Lubersac - Sponsor of renovations Interior remania late 19th – early 20th.
Henri Duchêne - Landscape architect Get the park back together with Achilles.
Achille Duchêne - Landscape architect Collaborate in the park late 19th–early 20th.
René Perchère - Landscape Created gardens closed in 1960.

Origin and history

Corbeil-Cerf Castle, located in the eponymous commune in the Hauts-de-France region of the Oise department, is a 16th and 17th century building marked by major changes in later periods. Ranked a Historic Monument, it illustrates the architectural evolution of aristocratic residences, with facades and roofs protected from 1966, as well as remarkable interior decorations such as woodwork or staircase of the vestibule, inscribed in 1992.

The Marquis de Lubersac profoundly altered the interiors in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, while landscape architects Henri and Achille Duchêne redesigned the park in a style characteristic of the era. In 1960, René Perchère, a renowned landscaper, added four flowered enclosed gardens to the east of the castle, completing a collection of Renaissance heritage and modern landscape creations. The park, the fence wall and a 17th century pavilion were classified in 1994, highlighting the heritage value of the estate.

The successive protections (1966, 1992, 1994) cover both exterior architectural elements (facades, roofs) and interior decorations (woodworks, paintings, trellis), as well as related structures such as the former press or vegetable garden. These measures reflect the diversity of the eras and talents that have helped shape this site, from anonymous masters of work from the 16th-17th centuries to landscape architects from the 19th-20th centuries.

External links