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Castle of Vic-sur-Aisne dans l'Aisne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Aisne

Castle of Vic-sur-Aisne

    2 Rue de Pomponne
    02290 Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Chateau de Vic-sur-Aisne
Crédit photo : Heather Cowper - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
900
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1700
1800
1900
2000
893
Fortification by King Eudes
Xe–XIe siècles
Conflicts of control
2e moitié du XIIe siècle
Construction of *Castrum*
XIIIe siècle
Protection by Pierrefonds
XVIe–XVIIe siècles
Reconstruction of the house
1914–1918
Damage during the Great War
18 novembre 1919
Ranking of dungeon
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Donjon: by order of 18 November 1919; Façade on the park: registration by order of 28 June 1927; Medieval precinct and moat; fence wall; entrance pavilions; facades and roofs of buildings of the communes; façades and roofs of the 17th century-XVIIIth century house body; park with its statuary and factories (cad. AB 117): registration by order of 10 April 1992

Key figures

Berthe - Princess, sister of Louis le Pieux The castle was given over to Saint-Médard.
Eudes - King of the Francs (888–898) Fortify the castle in 893.
Gui de Châtillon - Archbishop of Reims Subscribes the restoration of the castle in 1048.
Seigneurs de Pierrefonds - Domain protectors Military management until the 13th century.
Abbés commendataires de Saint-Médard - Rebuilders (XVIe–XVIIe s.) Modernisation of the house body.

Origin and history

Vic-sur-Aisne Castle, also called Castrum Vici super Axonum, was built in the 12th century on a height overlooking the right bank of Aisne, controlling a strategic axis between Amiens and Soissons. According to the chronicles of Saint-Médard de Soissons Abbey, it was ceded to the latter by Princess Berthe, sister of Louis le Pieux, before being fortified in 893 under the impulse of King Eudes, Count of Paris. This site became an issue of power between the lords of Coucy, the monks of Saint-Médard and the kings of France during the 10th and 11th centuries, changing hands several times.

In the 13th century, the monks of Saint-Médard placed Vic under the protection of the lords of Pierrefonds, who held a garrison there until the end of the 13th century. The village then became the seat of a chestnut, then a vassal viscount of the Counts of Soissons. The present 25-metre-high dungeon dates from the 13th century but was redesigned in the 15th and 18th centuries. The house body, rebuilt in the 16th and 17th centuries by Saint-Médard's trading abbots, completes a set including moat, medieval enclosures and a park mixing French and English styles.

The castle suffered heavy damage during the First World War. Several of its elements are protected as historical monuments: the dungeon (classified in 1919), the facades on the park (registered in 1927), and the medieval enclosure with its outbuildings (registered in 1992). The park houses a 17th century terracotta statuary, now very degraded, as well as 19th century factories. The ensemble illustrates the architectural and political evolution of the region, from medieval conflicts to its role of abbatial residence.

External links