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Château de Corbeville dans l'Essonne

Essonne

Château de Corbeville

    Domaine de Corbeville
    91400 Orsay

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1520
Initial construction
1590
Enlargement
1605
Add turrets
1660
Roof modification
1794
Sale as a national good
1946
Transformation into a research centre
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Isaac Arnauld - Counsel to Henri IV and Superintendent of Finance Owner and enlarger of the castle in 1590.
Marie Perrin - Wife of Isaac Arnauld Mentioned in the founding inscription of 1520.
Baronne de Schomberg - Owner in the 18th century Wise domain manager before 1789.
Madame Simone - Comedian and letterwoman Renter of the castle in the 1930s.
François Porché - Poet and dramatic author Married to Madame Simone, resident in 1932-1940.

Origin and history

The Corbeville estate, located in Orsay on the Saclay plateau, appears in history at the beginning of the 16th century. Built around 1520 as a residential pavilion, it was enlarged around 1590 by Isaac Arnauld, counselor of Henry IV, who added four turrets in 1605. This castle, without defensive role, was a place of life for influential families, such as the Arnauld and the Sainte-Marthe, linked to Jansenism.

In the 18th century, the estate passed into the hands of the Baron and Baroness of Schomberg, who made it a worldly residence while actively managing its agricultural land and park. The French Revolution led to its confiscation as "national property" in 1794, before it was bought by a tanner, then by bourgeois families like the Vavin in the 19th century.

The castle underwent a major transformation in the 20th century: acquired in 1946 by the Meters Company, it became a research centre in electronics, hosting laboratories until the 2000s. Today integrated into the Paris-Saclay project, it symbolizes the transition from a historical heritage to a modern scientific pole.

Its architecture, marked by a unique roof replacing in 1660 a double medieval structure, and its park with the old cooler and royal laugh, testify to its evolution throughout the centuries. The castle also housed personalities such as actress Madame Simone in the 1930s, or served as refuge for Jewish children after 1945.

The ancient archives and plans, like those of the engineer Archangé (1749), reveal a preserved topography: wood of the troche, vegetable gardens, and a sandstone quarry. These elements, combined with its role in scientific research, make Corbeville a place at the crossroads of history and innovation.

External links