In the center of the village of Brenthonne, a road leads us to the old Castle of Avully, hidden in the trees
In the center of the village of Brenthonne, a road leads us to the old Castle of Avully, hidden in the trees. Situated bellow the slopes of the Voirons Mountains, this ancient manor was built on the site of a Gallo-Roman villa during the first century AD, as gleaned from the numerous pottery sherds found in the soil during the castle’s restoration.
The family of Avully is mentioned as early as 1172, and they depended on the lords of Faucigny.
During the XIIth and XIIIth centuries, the Chablais territory was split between several feudal families. The prince bishop of Geneva exercised his authority over the left bank of Lake Geneva. His administrative authority extended from Geneva to Bouveret and his diocese was split into eight deaneries, of which one was Allinges. Allinges included its castle, as well as Avully, Rochette, Buffavent, and Coudrée. The Chablais was also placed under the authority of numerous lords, the counts of Geneva, the Sires of Faucigny, and the Counts of Savoy.
The earliest record of Avully is of a certain Namtelme, son of the knight Guichard of Avully, family vassal of the Lord of Langin, who has a fort situated at the foot of the Voirons. The fort has a tower and several ramparts. In 1335, the Count of Savoy ordered the Lord of Avully to strengthen the castle’s defenses, as the castle is located in a plain and has no natural defenses. From 1362 – 1363, the Lord of Avully participated in the Savoyard crusade. We don’t read that Jean of Avully took part in the expedition of the Green Count of Savoy, in the direction of Gallipoli, key to the Dardanelles, in order to defend the Count’s cousin, the Byzantine Emperor.
At the beginning of the XVth century, Jeanne of Avully is cited with her brother Humbert, as being party to the characters received at the House of Savoy at Ripaille. Humbert of Avully had been made liege-lord of the Red Count, Amadeus VII. Life touched by the noble court, together with ambitious designs, was luxurious but not without needing large sums of money.
With Humbert de Avully, the family of Boëge entered into the history of Avully. He married Françoise de Boëge, who had been named by her father, Pierre, in 1412 as sole inheritor of his estate. Pierre de Balleyson and Guigon de Rovorée were named executers of this act. Jean of Rovorée-Avully’s daughter, Philiberte, married the noble Georges d’Antioch, Lord of Yvoire, and one of the two lords of Nernier. It was she who, in 1499, sold the castle, territories, and dependencies for 8,000 florins to Bonifice of St. Michel, originally from Geneva. The act was signed at the castle of Yvoire, of which the Rovorée has lordship.
It was this St Michel who remodeled the castle for the last time, giving it the form seen today. St Michel and his family held the castle for the longest time, thus adding the most to its history, which includes Antoine de St Michel, its dealings with the citizens of Bern, Geneva, Théodore de Bèze, François de Sale, the Pope, and Marguerite of Austria.
According to Galiffe, a Genevan historian, The St Michel family was an old Genevan family. It was in 1386 that Michel of St Michel was made Bourgeois of Geneva.
We theorize that they were bankers who financed maritime expeditions in search of Middle Eastern spices and Cypriot sugar.
De Foras, in his armorial, wrote that the family became Protestants during the beginning of the Reformation, probably through the marriage of a family from Bern called Watteville. François de St Michel, nicknamed ‘‘The Spaniard’’, was named counsillor of Geneva in 1519. His wife, Marguerite, was thought to be Spanish or Portuguese, according to a chronicle by Bonivard. She was declared ‘‘capitain’’ of the Amazons, all of the noble ladies who were received in Geneva on August 4th, 1523, for the marriage of Princess Béatrice of Portugal and Charles III, Duke of Savoy.
These Amazons often numbered, according to the chronicle of the time, 300, armed with darts and silver shields. They were often invited to Avully for great parties. The most interesting of them was Antoine de St Michel. Protestant and President of the Consistory of Thonon, he converted to Catholicism after four years of discussion with François de Sales. He did everything in his power to stop the fratricidal struggles and ensure the return of religious peace.
This important figure, original and intelligent, ambitious and turbulent, attracted the anger of Genevans and a price was put on his head as soon as his conversion became known. To give an idea of the work of Antoine de St Michel, later Baron of Hermance and of Avully, it is necessary to reread some lines from the historian Alain Duffour (Wars of Geneva 1589 – 1593, 1958 Julien Edition).
Those of Geneva and Bern had engineered these wars in order to snatch territory from the Duke of Savoy in order to guarantee a ‘‘good peace’’. […] Antoine de St Michel entered the scene and managed to earn the confidence of both sides. He was Protestant (provisionally) and was descended on his mother’s side to De Watteville, a great family of Bern. He had already served as an intermediary between the Duke of Savoy, his master, and Geneva in 1580. The Baron of Avully proposed to the Duke of Savoy arbitration between the Swiss, which intrigued Fribourg and Berne in May 1589. Zurich and Lucerne refused to receive it. The Baron then proposed to the Duke of Savoy to ally with the city of Bern and the French who supported Geneva against Savoy. He manipulated both sides, and he did not have to do much to move his pawns into place. The essential for him was the resulting peace, as he was a great landowner needing a market to sell his harvest of wheat and wine. ‘‘What a comedian!’’ wrote Duffour, ‘‘He knew how to bluff!’’ French territories, Bern, and Geneva burned and looted all the Savoyard castles, but always spared Avully. Until, Antoine converted and Avully was attacked for three days in May of 1603. Resisting victoriously against repeated assaults, their assailants had to withdraw their dead and wounded, and according to the Genevan register, fourteen cows and forty sheep.
Let us return to the Baron of Avully’s conversion to Catholicism. This conversion, along with the influence of François de Sales, led other nobles to Catholicism as early as 1594. Influenced by his words and but also his interests, Antoine de St Michel entreated to Protestantism in Turin the 26th of August 1596, before the Papal Nuncio.
Théodore de Bèze, Calvinist and friend to the Baron of Avully, became furious after the announcement of the former’s conversion, and responded with the strongest of rebukes.
In response, the lord published a letter at Lyon in 1602 titled ‘‘Offensive and Defensive Weapons against the Calvinists.’’ Antoine de St Michel died in 1610. The check against scaling Geneva pushed back the efforts, ambitions and interests of the House of Savoy beyond the Alps.
The Lords of Avully only occupied their castle during the summer. The rest of the time, they lived at the court of Turin where riches, honors, and important posts were awarded to their family. Antoine de St Michel knew to keep his own house in the proper order, served and maintained by numerous servants.
After the family of St Michel, the castle passed to other hands; those of Scaglia by inheritance and those of Ferrod de Sares by way of sale. In March 1756, it was bought by François de Sales, lord of Brens, along with numerous forts situated at the foot of Langin Hill.
The castle stayed in this family until 1896, at which time it was sold to the Mouchets of Saxel, a family of wood merchants. During the revolution, the castle of the municipality of Brenthonne had escaped total destruction.
Therefore, due to the reluctance to carry out the orders of the revolutionaries, the owner was able to save the towers, but the dungeon was destroyed and the moat was filled in. The mayor Guarin Lacroiz, ancestor to the current owner, lived there with his family as a farmer. The Count of Foras, author of the Armorial of Savoy, noted in 1860 that the archives of Avully were very complete and well-preserved.
Unfortunately, the farmer at the time burned part of the castle when asked to vacate the premises. Years of farmers, vandals, and those who profited from using the castle as a stone quarry left the castle in ruins.
After 44 years of work; the Castle of Avully is once again restored to its former glory, where one can admire the residence of Louis of Savoie and Jean de Vernay and Guillaume d’Allinges and the Baron of Coudrée.
This reconstruction would not have been possible without the wonderful support of several friends of the History of Savoy, in particular :
- Mr Henri Baud, Sous Préfet,
- Dr Jacques Miguet,
- Charles Bonnet, Archéologue Cantonal,
- Prof. Tanner, University of Geneva,
- M. Michaud, Architect for Historical Monuments,
- Conseil Général de la Haute-Savoie,
- Mme Joséphine Bel and her daughter Yvonne.
We do not forget the help of various craftspeople: stonecutters, masons, carpenters, and other skilled workers, who completed their magnificent work in the spirit of their colleagues from the Middle Ages.
Avully, La Rochette, Buffavent, Langin, les Allinges, Ripaille, Coudrée, Rovorée, Yvoire, the Canton of Vaud, Valais, and Peidmont reminds us that XVth century Savoy possessed more territory than France.
At one time a residence for noble, privileged families, the castle is now at the disposal of numerous visitors who come to admire the magnificent gardens, dungeon, the tower, watch towers, moat, etc.
http://www.chateau-avully.com/
Le parking GRATUIT
Adulte: 7,50 €
Etudiants, chômeurs, handicapés: 6 €
Enfant (de 5 à 15 ans): 5 €
Enfant (moins de 5 ans): gratuit
Groupe adultes (à partir de 5 personnes): 6 €
Groupe enfants (à partir de 5 enfants): 4 €
Tarif famille (2 adultes et 2 enfants): 20 € (4 € par personne supplémentaire)
info@chateau-avully.com