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Château de Chenonceau in the Loire valley, France

A rural château in France.
:''For other senses of this word, see
château (disambiguation).''
A 'château' (plural ''châteaux'') is a
manor house or residence of the
lord of the manor or a country house of
nobility or
gentry, with or without fortifications, originally - and still most frequently - in
French-speaking regions. Where clarification is needed, a fortified château (that is, a
castle) is called a ''château fort'' , such as
Château fort de Roquetaillade. Care should be taken when translating the word château into
English: it is not used in the same way as "castle" is in English, and most châteaux are more appropriately described as "
palaces" or "
country houses" in English than as "castles". For example, the
Château de Versailles is so called because it was located in the country when it was built, but it does not bear any resemblance to a castle, so it is usually known in English as the Palace of Versailles.
The urban counterpart of ''château'' is ''
palais'', which in French is applied only to grand houses in a city. This usage is again different from that of the term "palace" in English, where there is no requirement that a palace must be in a city, but the word is rarely used for buildings other than the grandest royal residences.
Concept
If a château is not old, then it must be grand. A château is a "power house" as Sir
John Summerson dubbed the English (and Georgian Irish) "
stately homes" that are social counterparts of châteaux. It is the personal (and hopefully hereditary) badge of a family that represents the royal authority at some rank, locally. Thus this word is often used to refer to a residence of a member of the French royalty or the nobility, but some fine châteaux, such as
Vaux-le-Vicomte were built by the essentially high
bourgeois, but recently
ennobled,
tax-farmers and ministers of
Louis XIII and his successors.
A château is supported by its lands (''terres''), comprising a
demesne that renders the society of the château largely self-sufficient, in the manner of the historic
villa system of Rome and the Early Middle Ages. (Compare
manorialism and
hacienda.) The open Roman villas of the time of
Pliny the Elder,
Maecenas or emperor
Tiberius began to be walled in, then fortified in the
3rd century, and evolved into castellar "châteaux." Even in modern use a château still retains some enclosures that are the distant descendants of these outworks: its fenced-off forecourt, with gates that could be closed and perhaps with a
gatehouse or keeper's lodge, and its supporting outbuildings, like stables, kitchens, breweries, bakehouses, and lodgings for menservants in the ''garçonnière.'' Aside from the entrance ''cour d'honneur,'' the château may have an inner ''cour'' ("court"). Beyond, on the private inner side, the château faces a park that is enclosed, no matter how simply or discreetly.
In Paris, the original châteaux of the
Louvre (originally fortified) and
Luxembourg (originally in the suburbs) have lost their château name and have becomes "palaces" as the growing city enclosed them.
In the United States, the term ''château'' took root selectively. In the
Gilded Age resort of
Newport, Rhode Island, even the châteaux were always "cottages". But north of
Wilmington, Delaware, in upscale rural "Château Country" centred on the powerful
Du Pont family, some of the châteaux are really just
McMansions.
In Canada, especially in English, "château" more often refers to a hotel than a house. It applies only to
the largest and most elaborate of the railway hotels built during the golden age of Canadian rail, such as the
Château Lake Louise in
Lake Louise, Alberta, the
Château Laurier in
Ottawa, Ontario, the
Château Montebello in
Montebello, Quebec, and most famously the
Château Frontenac in
Quebec City.
In other French speaking regions in Europe such as the
Walloon region in
Belgium the word
Château is also widely used and has the same significance. There was a strong French influence on the architecture of these noble dwellings in Belgium. Fine examples are the 17th century
Château des Comtes de Marchin and the 18th century
Château de Seneffe.
French Châteaux
Loire Valley
The
Loire Valley (Vallée de la Loire) is home to more than
300 châteaux. They were built between the 10th and 20th centuries, first by the French kings and soon followed by the nobility, which have caused the valley to be called "the Garden of France".

Château of Dampierre-en-Yvelines: domesticated Baroque at the centre of Louis XIV's inner circle

Château de Boisclaireau, residence of the
Gueroust family, Counts of Boisclaireau, in the Loire Valley
Dampierre-en-Yvelines
(''illustration, right''), built by
Jules Hardouin-Mansart, 1675-1683 for the
duc de Chevreuse,
Colbert's son-in-law, is a
French Baroque château of manageable size. Protected behind fine wrought iron double gates, the main block and its outbuildings (''corps de logis''), linked by balustrades, are ranged symmetrically around a dry paved and gravelled ''cour d'honneur.'' Behind, the central axis is extended between the former
parterres, now mown hay. The park with formally shaped water was laid out by
André Le Notre. There are sumptuous interiors. The small scale (compared to
Vaux-le-Vicomte for example) makes it easier to compare it to the approximately contemporary
Het Loo, for
William III of Orange. These really are "Mansart roofs."
Bordeaux
There are many estates with true châteaux on them in
Bordeaux, but it is customary for any
wine-producing estate, no matter how humble, to prefix its name with "Château". This is true whether the building itself is a magnificent palace or a shack. If there were any trace of doubt that the Roman villas of
Aquitaine evolved into fortified self-contained châteaux, the wine-producing châteaux would dispel it.
See also
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Châteaux of the Loire Valley
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List of castles
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List of castles in France
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Faux château
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Châteauesque
External links
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Photos of Loire Châteaux
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Château de l'Isle-Marie
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Château de Ravignan
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Château de Montreuil-Bellay
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Château de Fontainebleau
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Château de Bellocq Bearn (in french)
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Château Saint-Aubin
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Château of Gaston Phoebus at Morlanne in Bearn (in french)