Château de Châtillon-Coligny explained

The Château de Châtillon-Coligny is a castle, later replaced with a smaller château, in the commune of Châtillon-Coligny in the Loiret département of France.

The present structure is heavily modified. Its origins were a medieval fortress whose keep was constructed around 1180. The castle was rebuilt during the Renaissance and demolished from 1798.[1] A new, more modest château was constructed in 1854. Of the original, the keep and a Renaissance well, attributed to Jean Goujon, are the only remains.

Location

The castle is built on a plateau dominating the Loing valley.

History

The castle is privately owned. The orangery and terraces have been listed since 1930 and the keep and well classified since 1949 as monument historiques by the French Ministry of Culture.

See also

External links

47.8221°N 2.8493°W

Notes and References

  1. [Jean Mesqui]
  2. Jean Mesqui, "Parements a bossage dans la fortification et le genie civil en France au Moyen Age" in Château Gaillard: études de castellologie médiévale, p. 106. Centre de recherches archéologiques médiévales, University of Caen, 1987 . Retrieved 6 November 2018.
  3. https://www.parcsetjardins.fr/jardins/196-parc-du-chateau-de-coligny "PARC DU CHÂTEAU DE COLIGNY (22 ha) - Loiret"
  4. J-M Voignier, "La destruction du Château de Châtillon-Coligny", Bulletin de la Société d'émulation de l'arrondissement de Montargis, vol 3, no. 107, April 1998, pages 14-17. ISSN 1153-2297 . Retrieved 6 November 2018.