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Château de Lauvergnac en Loire-Atlantique

Loire-Atlantique

Château de Lauvergnac

    1688 Boulevard de Lauvergnac
    44420 La Turballe

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1395
First certificate of the seigneury
1433
Annoyance of Peter The Pennec
1463
Expansion of the seigneury
1673
Sale to Pierre de The Hague
XIXe siècle (vers 1855)
Transformations style troubadour
2005
End of the Geloës property in Elsloo
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Pierre Le Pennec - Lord and noble Breton Anobli in 1433, enlarged the seigneury in 1463.
Pierre de La Haye - Lord of Silz Acquire the estate in 1673.
Jacques Anne de La Bourdonnaye - Lord of Boishullin Owner in 1749, father of Anne François Augustin.
Anne François Augustin de La Bourdonnaye - Noble Breton Born in Lauvergnac in 1747.
Comte de Geloës d’Elsloo - Owner-renovator of the 19th century Give the castle its present appearance.

Origin and history

The Château de Lauvergnac, located in the commune of La Turballe (Loire-Atlantique), originates in a seigneury attested from 1395. The toponym, of Breton origin, evokes a region populated by alders. Originally owned by the Lauvergnac family, the estate passes through alliances and successive sales to Le Pennec (XV century), The Hague (1673), and La Bourdonnaye (1749). The latter, noble parliamentarians of Rennes, raised Anne François Augustin de La Bourdonnaye, born in 1747 in Guérande. The castle changed hands again in 1773 (Le Pourceau de Mondoret family) before being acquired in 1855 by the Geloës d'Elsloo, who gave it its present appearance.

In the 19th century, the Earl of Geloës of Elsloo radically transformed the manor in troubadour style into a vogue. He added a glass gallery opening onto the park, raised a crenellated tower, rebuilt the chapel of Sainte-Barbe with its slender arrow and stained glass windows, and erected a house body decorated with lead gargoyles (monkey, crocodile, salamander). The estate, then spread over 300 hectares, includes four farms, three mills and pastures on the cliffs. Despite these changes, a Renaissance pavilion of the second half of the 16th century remains, a witness to earlier times.

The history of the castle is marked by its successive owners, often linked to the Breton nobility. Pierre Le Pennec, anoblished in 1433 by the Duke Jean V for his services during the siege of Pouancé (1432), enlarged the seigneury in 1463. Marriage alliances and land transactions shaped his destiny, as in 1673 with the sale to Pierre de The Hague, or in 1773 when he joined the Le Pourceau de Mondoret family. The Geloës family of Elsloo, the last owner before 2005, leaves a lasting architectural footprint, mixing medieval heritage and 19th century romanticism.

External links