Blonay Castle Explained

Blonay Castle
Native Name:Schloss Blonay
Built:1175
Condition:preserved
Location:Blonay
Coordinates:46.4694°N 6.89°W
Map Type:Canton of Vaud#Switzerland
Code:CH-VD

Blonay Castle is a castle in the municipality of Blonay of the Canton of Vaud in Switzerland. It is a Swiss heritage site of national significance.[1]

History

The castle was built in 1175, by William II of Blonay (died 1197), a ministerialis in Savoy, on the site of a fortified structure that dated from 1095. It has served as the Blonay family seat since that time, aside from a brief interruption in the 18th century.

The oldest remaining portion of the structure is the sturdy, square castle keep, which has been strengthened, and seen a row of buildings attached to create another courtyard. Only two of four towers remain, around an irregular rectangular plan. There is a forecourt with a Renaissance-style loggia, from 1677 on the western edge, and a chapel dating from the 15th century, with stained glass windows from 1577. Residential quarters built between the 18th and 20th centuries have undergone renovations and alterations. By the 19th century, a moat had been filled in.

Gustave Courbet created a painting of the castle in about 1875, during the artist's self-imposed exile from France, living in neighboring La Tour-de-Peilz.

See also

Further reading

Maxime Reymond, Marc-André Genevey et Pierre de Blonay. Fondation du château de Blonay, 1984

External links

– Sammlung von Bildern, Videos und Audiodateien

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Swiss inventory of cultural property of national and regional significance . 1 January 2017 . A-Objects . Federal Office for Cultural Protection (BABS) . 6 September 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100628110559/http://www.bevoelkerungsschutz.admin.ch/internet/bs/de/home/themen/kgs/kgs_inventar/a-objekte.html . 28 June 2010 . dead .