Château de Droupt-Saint-Basle

The Château de Droupt-Saint-Basle is a castle and château in the commune of Droupt-Saint-Basle in the Aube département of France.[1]

History

It was mentioned in 1206 as belonging to Girard, lord of Droupt. In 1580, the mayor of Troyes, Jean Mairat obtained the lands of Droupt and was authorised by to construct moats, drawbridges and walls. In 1586, he built a house there. In 1714, it became the property of the Chavaudon family, through Pierre Guillaume, Abbot of Notre-Dame de Mores. He and his brother, Etienne-Paul, undertook works on the buildings.

The edifice was added to the list of monuments historiques in 1987 and 1993.[1] The Paupe family who maintain it have installed a museum of popular arts.

Description

It still has water-filled moats, a drawbridge for carts and another for pedestrians in a monumental doorway. Three buildings arranged in a U-shape overlook a courtyard with several lawns and boxwood at the corners. A corner tower is a dovecote.

gollark: They definitely do not look that bright and shiny in real life.
gollark: The new £ coins are quite weird.
gollark: It *does* say >=5.5GPa there. That's pretty high pressure.
gollark: It's vaguely weird how the whole cultural thing of guns and whatnot is completely absent here in the UK, because of the "ban everything remotely dangerous" attitude here.
gollark: In the picture I mean.

See also

References

  1. Ministry of Culture: Château de Droupt-Saint-Basle (in French). Retrieved 28 December 2018.



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