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Tower of Chavaniac à Sauvat dans le Cantal

Cantal

Tower of Chavaniac

    2 Le Château
    15240 Sauvat
Tour de Chavaniac
Tour de Chavaniac
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1443
Authorized construction
2e quart XVe siècle
Construction period
1731
Date worn on lintel
avant 1826
Building barn
1879
End of Ribier seigneury
28 avril 1964
Registration MH
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Tower of Chavaniac (cad. A 199): inscription by decree of 28 April 1964

Key figures

Louis de Charpentier - Lord and sponsor Obtained permission to build in 1443.
Pierre de Beaufort-Turenne - Lord suzerain Authorizes the construction of the tower.
Prince de Condé - Picture visitor He stopped in 1752 during the Fronde.

Origin and history

The Chavaniac tower, located in Sauvat in the Cantal (Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes), is a defensive building built in the 2nd quarter of the 15th century. In 1443 Louis de Charpentier, vassal of Pierre de Beaufort-Turenne, obtained permission to build this tower to protect himself from looters and roadmen. The seigneury, originally owned by the Charpentiers, then passed to the families of Sarran and then Ribier, who kept it until 1879. The tower, of square plan with a circular staircase turret, is vaulted in a cradle on the ground floor and consists of three floors with fireplaces, one decorated with wooded coat of arms.

The present U-shaped castle is the result of major reconstructions in the 18th and 19th centuries, preserving only the original medieval tower. The outbuildings, such as stables (dated 1731) and barn-stables (before 1826) complete the whole. The tower, covered with a roof in a dardian pavilion, is distributed by a screw staircase with a conical roof. Among the remarkable elements are a cellar, a stencil, a well dug in the courtyard, and a pig house adjacent to the buildings.

The tower has been listed as historic monuments since April 28, 1964, recognizing its heritage value. The estate also includes domestic housing, flat or slate roofs, and architectural traces such as a 15th century fireplace in the east house body. The site illustrates the evolution of a medieval fortress as a seigneurial residence, marked by functional additions to modern times.

A notable historical episode mentions the visit of the Prince of Condé in 1752 on his journey between Agen and Châtillon-sur-Loing during the Fronde. This event highlights the strategic role of the castle, located on regional roads. The wooded coat of arms and the traces of polychromy in the tower also testify to the political and social transformations suffered by the seigneury over the centuries.

External links