Origin and history
Puicheric Castle, located in the Minervois in Occitanie, is a building built between the 16th and 18th centuries, mixing medieval architecture and Renaissance. Located on a steep hillside, it is girded with retaining walls and has two entrances, one of which is equipped with a walled portal topped by a vaulted corridor. Its interior facades, organized around a square courtyard, reveal carved decorations (corinthian columns, cherub friezes) and eroded coats of arms, while its exterior walls, by means of a sandstone apparatus, bear traces of reshaping and clogged openings, testifying to a complex architectural evolution.
The square tower, accessible from the leisure garden, houses 17th-century frescoes depicting mythological scenes (Persée and Medusa) and geometric medallions with characters. These paintings, as well as those of the ceilings of the house (flower baskets, oval medallions with landscapes), suggest a desire for prestige under Claude de Bourcier, Count of Saint-Aunès, seigneur of the place in 1688. The castle, inscribed in the Historical Monuments since 1952 (renewed in 2013), was successively owned by the families of Thury (from 1209), Brettes of Turin (XVIth-17th centuries), then the Riquet and Farjonel before its confiscation in 1792.
The gardens, built on a platform surrounding the castle, include a floral gazebo with views of the Corbières and a vegetable garden delimited by walls of ruined buildings, visible on the Napoleonic cadastre. The lower yard, transformed into a vegetable garden, preserves a well integrated with the enclosure wall and remains of missing buildings. The ensemble, acquired in 2010 by a private owner, is today a guest house, perpetuating its role of welcoming after centuries of seigneurial history and architectural transformations marked by wars, family alliances and adaptations to residential uses.
The history of the castle is marked by changes of influential owners, such as Lambert de Thury (from 1209), Guillaume de Brettes (known as Turin, from 1528), or Marie-Louise de Montagne, widow of President Riquet (1723). The historical dimensions of the cutlery, raised in 1641 (600 m2 for the castle, 662 m2 for the gardens), illustrate the importance of the estate. Defensive elements, such as square tower arches or reinforced walls, coexist with refined interior decorations (paintings, mouldings), reflecting a duality between original military function and aristocratic residence.
Architecturally, the castle stands out for its interior courtyard with its harmonized facades (story bands, arches in basket handle) and its south entrance door, decorated with a broken pediment and a carved imposte. The roofs, standardized by a three-row genoise, and the cross-line windows (like the one on the northern facade, framed by columns) bear witness to Renaissance influences. The square tower, probably prior to the restorations of the 16th century, with its dome and frescoes, is a key element of the heritage, as is the remains of the 19th century gloriette, added to the period when the estate gradually lost its seigneurial vocation to become a resort.
Announcements
Please log in to post a review