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Old castle à Allemans-du-Dropt dans le Lot-et-Garonne

Lot-et-Garonne

Old castle

    14 Rue du Château
    47800 Allemans-du-Dropt
Ancien château
Ancien château
Ancien château
Crédit photo : MOSSOT - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1324
Death of Bertrand de Goth
1336
Transmission to Bernard de Lamotte
XIIIe siècle
Construction of the primitive castle
XVe siècle
Transition to the Ricard family
1575
Wedding of Jeanne de Bouilhaguet
1654
Acquisition by Sansac
1984
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The remains of the remaining tower (Box B 255): inscription by decree of 4 May 1984

Key figures

Bertrand de Goth - Lord of Monteux and nephew of Clement V Owner in the 14th century.
Régine de Goth - Inheriting daughter of Bertrand Died without going down in 1325.
Jean Ier d’Armagnac - Count of Armagnac Wife of Régine, in estate conflict.
Bernard de Lamotte - Neveu heir Owner in 1336.
Pierre de Ricard - Member of Ricard family Died without heir (15th century).
Jeanne de Bouilhaguet - Widow of Pierre de Ricard Remarried in 1575.
Jean de Vaucocour - Cook New owner by marriage.
Famille de Sansac - Latest pre-revolutionary owners Originally from Saintonge (from 1654).

Origin and history

The castle of Allemans-du-Dropt found its origins in the 13th century, with the construction of a primitive building of which there remains a round tower at the base and octagonal in its upper part, surmounted by a ribbed dome. This castle, located in Guyenne, was given in the 14th century to Bertrand de Goth, nephew of Pope Clement V and lord of Monteux, by the King of England. On his death in 1324, a conflict of inheritance broke out between the count d'Armagnac (husband of his daughter Régine, died without descendant in 1325) and the heirs appointed by substitution. In 1336, the castle finally fell to a nephew, Bernard de Lamotte.

In the 15th century, the estate came into the hands of the Ricard family, notaries who owned the Château de Frémauret. After the death of Pierre de Ricard, his widow Jeanne de Bouilhaguet remarried in 1575 with Jean de Vaucocour, squire. The castle then changed hands, belonging successively to the families of the Cars and then Sansac (from Saintonge), who kept it until the Revolution. Ruined during this period, it was partially demolished, leaving only the west wing (XVIth-17th centuries), marked by sill windows and a lintel door, as well as a tower classified as a Historic Monument in 1984.

The west wing, redesigned with two pavilions framed by a central body, bears witness to the architectural transformations of the 16th-17th centuries. The tower, the only vestige of the primitive castle, illustrates the evolution of medieval defensive techniques, with its round base and octagonal upper part, crowned by a veined dome. These elements, combined with the archives, offer an overview of the seigneurial struggles and family alliances that marked the history of Guyenne.

External links