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Balhan Tower of Château-Thierry dans l'Aisne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Aisne

Balhan Tower of Château-Thierry

    16 Rue du Pont
    02400 Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Tour Balhan de Château-Thierry
Crédit photo : Johann Dréo (User:Nojhan) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1520
Installation of the bell
2e moitié du XVe siècle
Initial construction
Fin XVe - début XVIe siècle
Transformation into a communal hotel
1740
Structural rehabilitation
1914-1918
Damage during the First World War
2 décembre 1926
Historical monument classification
1997
Renovation of the bell tower
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Balhan Tower: registration by decree of 2 December 1926

Key figures

Jehan Balhan - Notable and grenetier merchant Finished the bell of 1520.
Antoine le Bâtard de Bourgogne - Son of Philip the Good Possible sponsor of the tower.
François Le Goût - Master carpenter (1520) Contractor of initial work.
Robert Ganois - Master locksmith (1520) Collaborated in construction.

Origin and history

The Balhan Tower, located at Château-Thierry in Aisne, is the only vestige of a medieval building named Fort Saint-Jacques, probably a seigneurial house or defensive work. At the end of the 15th or early 16th century, it was transformed into a communal or private hotel, the Hôtel du Mouton d'Or. Its current structure, with its scallops and bell tower, dates from this period. The adjacent buildings disappeared in the 19th century and during the First World War, leaving the tower isolated.

Inside, a stairway with screws in an octagonal cage once served two missing houses. The tower also houses a preserved sculpted oratory and a bell of 1520, offered by the notable Jehan Balhan, who gave him his name. This bell, intended for municipal use, symbolizes the link between the tower and the civic life of Château-Thierry. After damage during World War I, the tower was restored and listed as historical monuments in 1926.

Originally conceived as a dungeon of Fort Santiago, the Balhan Tower also served as a municipal belfry. Its bell, added later, replaces an original watchtower function. A 16th century engraving shows two towered towers with four-slope roofs, suggesting a more complex structure at the time. The inner chapel, vaulted by the dogives, was used until the Revolution, while the frame was rebuilt in 1740.

The authorship of the tower is sometimes attributed to Antoine le Bâtard de Bourgogne, son of Philippe le Bon, who also reconstructs the Saint-Martin and Saint-Crépin churches of the city. However, the bell of 1520, funded by Jehan Balhan, remains the most documented element. The restorations of the 19th and 20th centuries, especially after 1918, preserved this witness of medieval civil architecture and its evolution towards communal use.

Today, the Balhan Tower stands on Rue du Pont in Château-Thierry, property of the commune. Its staircase leads to an old Gothic chapel and a watch bedroom, while its campanile, renovated in 1997, dominates the city. The monument illustrates the transition between a medieval defensive function and an urban symbolic role, marked by its bell and clock added in 1874.

External links