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Château de Montauquier dans le Tarn

Tarn

Château de Montauquier


    81470 Cuq-Toulza

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1794
Marriage of Hargenvilliers-Labarthe
1841
Death of General d'Hargenvilliers
XIXe siècle (seconde moitié)
Property of Alphonse de Saint-Simon
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Joseph d'Hargenvilliers - General Owner, died at the castle in 1841.
Adélaïde de Labarthe - Wife of Hargenvilliers Daughter of Pierre-Claude de Labarthe, lord of Cuq-Toulza.
Pierre-Claude de Labarthe - Lord of Cuq-Toulza Father of Adelaide, probable donor of the castle.
Félix-Aimar-Thimoléon d'Hargenvilliers - Heir Son of the General, inherit the castle.
Alphonse de Saint-Simon - Mayor of Cuq-Toulza Owner in the 19th century.

Origin and history

The Château de Montauquier, located in Cuq-Toulza in the Tarn, is a monument whose precise origins remain unclear. Although lords bearing the name Montauquier were attested as early as the 16th century (like François Philibert de Charance), these references probably concern another place near Gap. The present building, of sober style and dated mainly from the 17th and 18th centuries, however, could go back partly to the 16th century. His documented history began with his acquisition by the family of Labarthe, after the marriage of General Joseph d'Hargenvilliers with Adelaide de Labarthe in 1794, suggesting that he was part of his dowry.

The castle was closely linked to the family of Hargenvilliers: the general died there in 1841, and his son Felix-Aimar-Thimoleon inherited it. In the 19th century, the estate moved to Alphonse de Saint-Simon, Mayor of Cuq-Toulza and General Councillor of Tarn. Architecturally, the castle consists of a three-storey main house body, flanked by secondary wings surrounding an inner courtyard. Its austerity is underlined by a symmetrical facade in seven spans, embellished only with a sundial. The estate also includes a wooded park, a dovecote and a remarkable well.

The history of the castle reflects the social dynamics of the era: marriage alliances between noble families, heritage transmission, and involvement in local life (as evidenced by the function of Alphonse de Saint-Simon). Although its defensive role is not mentioned, its imposing structure and park suggest a seigneurial residence designed to affirm a social status, typical of the rural buildings of the Ancien Régime and of the 19th century in Occitanie.

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