Castles and Chateaux of Old Burgundy
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M. F. Mansfield. Castles and Chateaux of Old Burgundy
Castles and Chateaux of Old Burgundy
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I. THE REALM OF THE BURGUNDIANS
CHAPTER II. IN THE VALLEY OF THE YONNE
CHAPTER III. AVALLON, VEZELAY AND CHASTELLUX
CHAPTER IV. SEMUR-EN-AUXOIS, ÉPOISSES AND BOURBILLY
CHAPTER V. MONTBARD AND BUSSY-RABUTIN
CHAPTER VI “CHASTILLON AU NOBLE DUC” (The War Cry of the Bourguignons)
CHAPTER VII. TONNERRE, TANLAY AND ANCY-LE-FRANC
CHAPTER VIII. IN OLD BURGUNDY
CHAPTER IX. DIJON, THE CITY OF THE DUKES
CHAPTER X. IN THE CÔTE D’OR: BEAUNE, LAROCHEPOT AND ÉPINAC
CHAPTER XI. MÂCON, CLUNY AND THE CHAROLLAIS
CHAPTER XII. IN THE BEAUJOLAIS AND LYONNAIS
CHAPTER XIII. THE FRANCHE COMTÉ: AUXONNE AND BESANÇON
CHAPTER XIV. THE SWISS BORDER: BUGEY AND BRESSE
CHAPTER XV. GRENOBLE AND VIZILLE: THE CAPITAL OF THE DAUPHINS
CHAPTER XVI. CHAMBÉRY AND THE LAC DU BOURGET
CHAPTER XVII. IN THE SHADOW OF LA GRANDE CHARTREUSE
CHAPTER XVIII. ANNECY AND LAC LEMAN
CHAPTER XIX. THE MOUNTAIN BACKGROUND OF SAVOY
CHAPTER XX. BY THE BANKS OF THE RHÔNE
CHAPTER XXI. IN THE ALPS OF DAUPHINY
CHAPTER XXII. IN LOWER DAUPHINY
Index
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M. F. Mansfield
Published by Good Press, 2019
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The great tower, or citadel, a part of the royal chateau where the king lodged on his brief visits to his pet city, was intended at once to serve as a fortress and a symbol of dignity, and it played the double part admirably. Attached to this tower on the north was the Royal Chateau de Salles, a favourite abode of the royalties of the thirteenth century. Little or nothing of this dwelling remains to-day save the walls of the chapel, and here and there an expanse of wall built up into some more humble edifice, but still recognizable as once having possessed a greater dignity. There are various fragmentary foundation walls of old towers and other dependencies of the chateau, and the old ramparts cropping out here and there, but there is no definitely formed building of a sufficiently commanding presence to warrant rank as a historical monument of the quality required by the governmental authorities in order to have its patronage and protection.
Philippe-Auguste, in 1204, assembled here a parliament where the celebrated ordonnance “Stabilementum Feudorum” was framed. This alone is enough to make Villeneuve stand out large in the annals of feudalism, if indeed no monuments whatever existed to bring it to mind. It was the code by which the entire machinery of French feudalism was put into motion and kept in running order, and for this reason the Chateau de Salles, where the king was in residence when he gave his hand and seal to the document, should occupy a higher place than it usually does. The Chateau de Salles was called “royal” in distinction to the usual seigneurial chateau which was merely “noble.” It was not so much a permanent residence of the French monarchs as a sort of a rest-house on the way down to their Burgundian possession after they had become masters of the duchy. The donjon tower that one sees to-day is the chief, indeed the only definitely defined, fragment of this once royal chateau which still exists, but it is sufficiently impressive and grand in its proportions to suggest the magnitude of the entire fabric as it must once have been, and for that reason is all-sufficient in its appeal to the romantic and historic sense.
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