The Real Haunted Story Of Chateau de Chateaubriant
Real Story
The medieval Chateau de Chateau Breon at Chateau Breon Luau Atlantique was extensively remodeled during the Renaissance. Like Vitre, Fugaire, Anceneise, and Clisson, the first castle was erected in the 11th century on Brittany's eastern frontier to protect the dutchie from Anjou and France. The Middle Ages saw multiple castle renovations and the town of Chateaubriand grow around it. The French besieged and took the fortress during the Mad War. The largely ruined keep and halls were lavishly rebuilt. When the Renaissance Palace was erected against the medieval ensemes in the 16th century, the Chateau took its final form. The Chateau was sold and partitioned multiple times after the French Revolution, making it an administrative center with the Sioux Prefecture court and police station. All these offices closed after 1970 and the Chateau is partially available to tourists.
The fortress was erected in the early 11th century and initially recorded between 10:30 and 10:42. Bryant. Ran Envoy erected it as an outpost in the pay de la May. This area surrounding Chateaubriand was a commerce hub and buffer between Wrens, Nant and Angers. Bury Fair was created in 1049 in a town suburb. Briant built the Bere Church and Priory 2 medieval Chateaubriand features. The initial castle was a wooden Mott in Bailey. It ruled the Cher and Rollard with two concentric motes. One was dry, one wet. It has a large stone square keep constructed in 1100.
A Chapel and two halls were erected in the 12th century and finished in the 13th. In the same era, Chateaubriand became a roller river town. City walls were erected in the 13th, 15th century. Upper Ward, gatehouse, curtain wall and most towers were erected in the 13th century. The gatehouse is 225 meter. Towers remain rebuilt in the 14th century. The halls and keep and Lower Bailey gatehouse were finished before 1400. Brilliant founded the House of Chateaubriand, which collapsed in 1383. Another Breton aristocratic family dining inherited Chateaubriand. The denounced had no male children in 1444. The last Baroness of Chateaubriand, Francois de Dignon, challenged Francis, the second of Brittany, in 1486, the Lords of Brittany sought the king of France to resolve a Breton domestic conflict with the Chateaubriand Treaty, she wrote.
The pact, which misled Francis second contributed to the Mad War and demonstrated Britney's political weakness. Castles were seized one after another by the French throughout the conflict. Chateaubriand succumbed after a week of siege in 1488. Francoise did not rebuilt the castle after the war. The original walls didn't meet military standards. Therefore, a bastion was erected the keep and halls which lost their protective role, had huge windows. The Baroness requested flamboyant fires inside. Francois de Dinon desired an elegant home not only keep and hall upgrades, she commissioned a lower Bailey palace. After the French Revolution, the National Guard utilized this palace, which became known as Batim on de Guards guards building.
The new house was finished in the early 16th century following Francois death. Jean de Laval, her grandson and House of Laval member, own Chateaubriand. Jean de la Valle disliked the new palace, a harsh first Renaissance architecture. He had a second Renaissance style Italian style wing erected in 1530. The long gallery that angles the palace is by Jean de Laval in 1543. Jean de Laval died airless and handed his properties and titles. French Constable Ann Demont Moronsi the constable finished Jean de Laval's work but moved to the Chateau de Cuis near Paris. Chateaubriand was part of the Monmarnesi House until 1632, when Henry the second was exiled and killed for crime. The Princess of Conde held the barony until the French Revolution. The Conde upgraded the Chateau by remodeling rooms like the Chamberay in the Jean de Laval wing around 1632.
Instead of Chateaubriand, the Princess lived in Chantilly and their Paris hotel, particularly since the Dukes of Monmouth and subsequently the Princess of Conde were far away. The town council gained considerable freedom. But the Lord still had local officials in the Chateau Louis 5th de Beourbon Conde was one of the first Lords exiled during the French Revolution. He left France for England 1789. The Chateau housed the town's National Guard storehouses and a police station. Locals bought or leased sections of the buildings and courtyards, and the Moat was partly filled.
The Prince of Conde gradually inherited the land during the Bourbon Restoration. He sold it finally. The town council sought to acquire the Chateau for its prison court and services. But the Prince refused to work with the administration, so the mayor bought it himself. He sold the remainder to the town council and gave the department the Lower Bailey gatehouse, which became a prison.
Mayor Martin Connison preserved part of the estate and erected a mansion there in 1822. In 1839, the Council proposed demolishing the keep to create a school and bridge using its stones. After great protest, the Chateau was included to the first list of Monuments Historiques in 1840. The municipality ceded the Chateau to the Duke of Omahu in 1845 because it couldn't maintain it. The Duke renovated Mayor Martin Connoislene's mansion.
He surrendered the Chateau to the Loire Atlantique Department in 1853 after following his father, Louis Philippe the 1st to England after the revolution of 1848. The Su Prefecture relocated there in 1854 and the 1822 home became his residence after the Duke of Omahu bought the estate, the police station court and prison were moved, but they returned in 1855.
The department requested the chateau's removal from the Monument historique list in 1887 because it could not finance the authorities repairs after 1909. The keep was restored multiple times. The Chateau rejoined the list in 1920. An American bombing strike in 1944 damaged the Renaissance




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