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Tour de Montlhéry dans l'Essonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Tour
Essonne

Tour de Montlhéry

    Allée de la Tour
    91310 Montlhéry
Tour de Montlhéry
Tour de Montlhéry
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Crédit photo : CJ DUB - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 991
Construction of the castral motte
1104
Taken by Philippe I
1118
Integration into the Royal Domain
XIIIe siècle
Renovation under Philippe Auguste
1358–1360
English seats
1591
Partial dismantling
1822
Sound speed measurement
1840
Historical Monument
2012
Reopening to the public
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Remnants (Cases B 1458-1460): ranking by list of 1840

Key figures

Thibaud de Montlhéry - First lord and forester Builder of the castral mot (circa 991).
Philippe Ier - King of France Take the fortress in 1104, shave the fortifications.
Louis VI - King of France Integrate Montlhéry into the royal domain (1118).
Philippe Auguste - King of France Renovated courtines and dungeon (11th century).
Olivier de Clisson - Connétable de France Rename the upper part of the dungeon (14th century).
François Arago - Physician and astronomer Measure the speed of sound (1822).
Henri Labrouste - Architect Restore the tower (1840).

Origin and history

The Montlhéry Tower is the last vestige of a castle built from the 10th century on a hill overlooking the Orge Valley, in the present Essonne department. Around 991, Thibaud de Montlhéry, the first lord and forester of the place, erected a castral motte with a tower surrounded by a shirt. This strategic site, controlling the route of Orleans, becomes an issue for Capetian kings. In 1104, Philip I took possession of it, only keeping the tower after having shaved the other fortifications. Louis VI became a permanent member of the royal estate in 1118.

In the 13th century, the fortress was strengthened under Philippe Auguste, with straight courtesines and circular towers. The 30-metre-high dungeon was redesigned in the 14th century by Olivier de Clisson, who added four floors and a round path. The tower served as a refuge in Saint Louis in 1227 and resisted English sieges (1358–1360). During the Wars of Religion, it became a Calvinist headquarters before being partially dismantled in 1591 on the order of Henry IV.

In the 19th century, the tower was classified as a historic monument (1840) and restored by Henri Labrouste, who consolidated its structure and built a terrace. It became a place for scientific experimentation: in 1822 Arago and Gay-Lussac measured the speed of sound, and in 1874 Alfred Cornu studied the speed of light. Closed to the public in 1992, it was renovated between 2000 and 2009 before reopening in 2012, offering a panorama of the region.

Excavations and studies reveal an original pentagonal plane, with an isolated master tower, four circular towers at angles, and a complex defensive system (fossed, drawbridge). The dungeon, divided into six levels, combines hexagonal rooms at the bottom and square at the top, with suspended latrines and mâchicoulis. The materials used – sandstone, millstone, and brick for restoration – bear witness to medieval and modern techniques.

The tower is inseparable from Capetian history and Franco-English conflicts. It is home to prominent figures such as Louis VI, Saint Louis, or Charles the Témeraire, whose battle of 1465 opposed Louis XI. Its decline began in the 16th century, when its stones were used to build the ramparts of Montlhéry. In the 18th century, its ditches were filled to create gardens, before it was safeguarded by the state in the 19th century.

External links