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Château de Hautségur à Meyras en Ardèche

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Maison forte
Ardèche

Château de Hautségur

    D'Authsegur
    07380 Meyras
Château de Hautségur
Château de Hautségur
Château de Hautségur
Château de Hautségur
Château de Hautségur
Château de Hautségur
Château de Hautségur
Château de Hautségur
Crédit photo : Celeda - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1900
2000
XIIe siècle
Initial watch tower
1568–1598
Renaissance transformation
13 janvier 1937
Registration MH
février 2010
Buy by Demangeon
2012
Reunification of the castle
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château de Hautségur : inscription by order of 13 January 1937

Key figures

François de Langlade - Lord and Modernizer Aceta Hautsegur between 1568 and 1597.
Jean de Langlade - Son of Francis Supervised the Renaissance works (1597–98).
Patricia Demangeon - Owner restaurant Rachet the castle in 2010 to renovate it.
Anne de Lévis-Ventadour - Former owner Vendit Hautségur aux Langlades in 1593.

Origin and history

The château of Hautségur, initially a 12th century watchtower, was partially demolished during the Wars of Religion before being rebuilt in the 16th century. Located in Meyras in Ardèche, it dominates the Ardèche valley and the hamlet of Barutel, on a strategic site near a Roman road linking Meyras to the thermal baths of Neyrac. Its location made it a key watch post, controlling access between the valleys of the Bourges, Fontaulier and Ardèche.

Listed in the Inventory of Historic Monuments in 1937, the castle knew several owners before its acquisition in 2010 by Patricia Demangeon, who undertook its restoration. Its architecture combines a square body flanked by round towers and peppers, with a remarkably preserved Renaissance screw staircase. The vaulted room on the ground floor, an old "men's room", was transformed into a kitchen, while the floors house rooms with decorated ceilings.

The entrance gate, decorated with a Latin inscription from Psalm 126 ("Nisi Dominus aedificavit domum"), reflects the Protestant influence of the family of Langlade, owner in the sixteenth century. This family, documented in 1414, played a major role in the history of the castle, including François de Langlade and his son Jean, who modernized the building between 1568 and 1598. The engraved dates (1597, 1598) on the lintels attest to these transformations.

The exact origins of Hautségur remain unclear, but its evolution follows that of medieval castles: an initial central dungeon, gradually surrounded by courtines and towers to shelter peasants and reserves in times of conflict. The castle was shared among several owners for centuries before its "unification" in 2012. Its spiral staircase, finished with a "parasol" device, and its Renaissance chimneys make it a rare example of military and residential architecture of the period.

A partial gothic inscription, engraved on a scauguette, may mention a vow of prosperity ("that it remains happy"), but its transcription remains uncertain due to the erosion of the stone. The castle, formerly called Ruppesegura or Altasegura, also illustrates the strategic importance of Meyras, a crossroads of communications before the opening of the major modern roads in the seventeenth century.

External links