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Beauregard Castle in Chens-sur-Léman en Haute-Savoie

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Maison forte
Haute-Savoie

Beauregard Castle in Chens-sur-Léman

    Rue du Château
    74140 Chens-sur-Léman
Private property
Château de Beauregard à Chens-sur-Léman
Château de Beauregard à Chens-sur-Léman
Château de Beauregard à Chens-sur-Léman
Château de Beauregard à Chens-sur-Léman
Château de Beauregard à Chens-sur-Léman
Château de Beauregard à Chens-sur-Léman
Crédit photo : Alexey M. - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1250
Initial construction
1402
Purchase by Savoy
1670
Acquisition of Costa family
1700
Erection in marquisat
1792
Revolutionary damage
1964
Partial classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs (Case B 11): inscription by order of 1 June 1964

Key figures

Amédée VIII de Savoie - Count then Duke of Savoy Buyer of the castle in 1402.
Famille Costa de Beauregard - Marquis owners (from 1670) Build the estate in marquisat.
Comtes de Genève - Initial Lords Founders of chestnut in the 13th century.

Origin and history

The Château de Beauregard, built around 1250 in Chens-sur-Léman, was originally a strategic watchtower for the Counts of Geneva. Located on the left bank of the Hermance in front of the Léman, it served as a forward post against Savoyard possessions in Chablais, including Thonon. This fortified site, integrated with the Beauregard-Ballelon chestnut, embodied the power of comtal with a chestnut named to manage tax and maintenance.

Damaged in 1536 by the Bernese and then in 1792 during the Revolution, the castle had several notable owners. Repurchased in 1402 by Amédée VIII de Savoie, in 1670 it became property of the Costa de Beauregard family, erected as a marquisat in 1700. Despite transformations, his 13th century pentagonal dungeon, with a remarkable roof, remains as a witness to his military and seigneurial past.

Partially listed as Historic Monuments in 1964, the estate includes a pre-invented park in 1991 as a remarkable garden. Its history reflects the regional tensions between Geneva and Savoie, as well as the evolution of feudal systems towards the Ancien Régime. The châtellenie, first comtal Geneva, became Savoyard in 1401, changing the role of the chestnut as a revocable officer.

Archaeological and textual sources (Guichonnet, Blondel) underline its strategic and administrative importance. Today, the castle illustrates medieval defensive architecture adapted to the political stakes of the Northern Alps, between Lake Geneva and Savoyard mountains.

External links