Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château de Fayolle en Charente

Charente

Château de Fayolle

    4 Fayolle
    16500 Abzac

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIIe siècle
Construction of dungeon
1506
Wedding of Antoinette Ambasmat
1795
Imprisonment of Marie-Jeanne de Couhé
XVIIIe siècle
Mansart roof
XIXe siècle
Transmission to Saint-Georges
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Robert Ambasmat - Lord of the Vestizons First known lord of the castle
Antoinette Ambasmat - Heir of the castle Wife François de Couhé in 1506
François de Couhé de Lusignan - Castle transformer Make the dungeon a home
Marie-Jeanne de Couhé - Lady of Fayolle Imprisoned in 1795 as a suspect

Origin and history

The castle of Fayolle, located in the town of Abzac in Charente, has its origins in the 13th century with the construction of a dungeon flanked by full foothills. This first building, typical of medieval defensive architecture, bears witness to the protection needs of the period in this border region between Poitou and Limousin. Local lords, such as the Ambasmat family, played a strategic role there, particularly as guardians of the Comtal seal.

At the beginning of the 16th century, the castle evolved into a residential function under the impulse of François de Couhé de Lusignan, husband of Antoinette Ambasmat in 1506. The latter built the dungeon into a house, marking the transition to a more comfortable architecture, characteristic of the Renaissance. The castle remained in Couhé's family for three centuries, crossing the upheavals of the French Revolution without undergoing major destruction, although Marie-Jeanne de Couhé, lady of Fayolle, was imprisoned in 1795 as a suspect.

The architecture of the castle is distinguished by its rectangular house, covered in the eighteenth century by a Mansart roof, and its three round towers serving as foothills. A fourth polygonal tower, at the northwest corner, as well as a round staircase tower topped by a pepper oil, add to its picturesque character. The commons, redesigned in the 19th century, complete the whole, reflecting the successive adaptations of the estate to the needs of its owners.

By marriage alliances, the castle passed to the families of Saint-Georges in the 19th century, then to the Boismarmin in the early 20th century, before being acquired by the family of L-Hermite, the present owner. These transmissions illustrate the lasting anchoring of this monument in local history, between medieval heritage and modern transformations.

External links