The Château d'Uzès (or the Duchy) is an 11th-century fortified castle in the medieval town of Uzès in the Gard department of Occitanie, France. It has been listed as a monument historique since 1934, and partially classified since 1889.
The lordship of Uzès was founded in the 11th century, at the beginning of feudalism, by Elzéart d'Uzès, 1st Lord of Uzès. The fortified town and its fortified castle were then built (then remodeled over time) on the site of the previous castrum, with its ramparts, its corner towers, its 42 -metre keep, built by Bermond I of Uzès in the 12th century, its lordly dwelling (with a 16th-century Renaissance façade), its thousand-year-old cellars, and its flamboyant Gothic castle chapel from the 16th century (with a roof in glazed Burgundy tiles with the coat of arms of Antoine de Crussol,the 1st Duke of Uzès, from the 16th century, of the House of Crussol.[1]
The castle was sold as national property during the French Revolution and transformed into a college. The 10th Duke of Uzès, Marie François Emmanuel de Crussol, bought the castle back during the Second Restoration in 1824, before it became a college again following the financial difficulties of his successors. In 1951, the Marquise de Crussol launched major restoration work on the castle. In 1957, she bought it from her nephew Emmanuel de Crussol, 15th Duke of Uzès. In the early 1960s, she intervened with André Malraux, the Minister of Cultural Affairs. The Malraux law of 1962 allowed a protected sector to be created in Uzès in 1965.[3]
Present day
The castle is currently open to visitors, owned by Jacques-Emmanuel de Crussol d'Uzès, the 17th Duke. It is listed with the medieval city of Uzès: a protected area since 1978, and a town of art and history since 2008.[4]
Other towers of Uzès
The alignment of the three towers-dungeons of Uzès symbolizes the three forms of royal, episcopal, and ducal powers of the Middle Ages, with:[5]
The King's Tower (or the Prison Tower) and its machicolations, symbols of the monarchy, and its medieval garden at the foot of the tower.