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Castle of Nesle en Côte-d'or

Côte-dor

Castle of Nesle

    4 Impasse du Château
    21330 Nesle-et-Massoult

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1217–1282
Cartular of Jean de Nesle
1418
Extension of the fief by Jean without Fear
1695
Architectural description
XVe–XVIIe siècles
Nobiliary transmission
1794
Connection to Chantilly Hospital
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Jean de Nesle - First Lord (11th century) Author of the preserved cartular.
Jacques de Courtiamble - Lord in 1418 Get the extension of the fief.
Jean sans Peur - Duke of Burgundy (1371–1419) Allows expansion of the domain.
Philippe Pot - Grand Sénéchal de Bourgogne (1428–1493) Hereto inherit the castle via his mother.
Guillaume de Montmorency - Owner in 1512 Receives the castle by transmission.

Origin and history

The castle fort of Nesle is located in Nesle-et-Massoult, in the department of the Côte d'Or (region Burgundy-Franche-Comté). Built on a rocky spur, it overlooks a corner of the 19th district road from Nesle to Massoult. This strategic site, typical of medieval fortifications, controlled an axis of local circulation in the Châtillonnais.

The primitive castle dates back to the 13th century, as attests to its cartular preserved at the Condé Museum of Chantilly. This document, compiled between 1217 and 1282 by Jean, first seigneur of Nesle, lists 83 acts in Latin and French medium, as well as a censier. Later bound by the Duke of Aumale for its preservation, this cartular offers a rare testimony on medieval seigneurial management. A study presented in 2006 at a symposium in Thouars highlighted its importance in understanding the archival practices of the time.

In the 15th century, the fief passed into the hands of prominent Burgundy figures. In 1418, Jacques de Courtiamble obtained from Jean sans Peur, Duke of Burgundy, the extension of his estate. The castle was later inherited by Philippe Pot (1428–1493), a great Sénéchal of Burgundy and knight of the Golden Flesh, via his mother Marguerite de Courtiambles. In 1512, he echoed Guillaume de Montmorency, illustrating the nobiliary alliances of the Renaissance.

Architecture evolved until the 17th century, combining defensive and residential features. In 1695, the castle consisted of two square towers of four to five floors, a lower courtyard and walls. The dungeon, partially visible, is connected to the house body by a courtine with a round path. Elements such as sled windows or an octagonal staircase turret remain, reflecting its adaptation to the needs of successive periods.

The French Revolution marked a turning point: in 1794 the estate depended on the hospital of Chantilly, of which the prince of Condé was honorary lord. Today, only a 17th-century house remains inhabited, while the remains (large-scale wall, building angle, chimney crow) recall its past as a house-strong. No major restorations are mentioned, leaving the site in partial conservation status.

External links