
Beynac
N 44° 50.437 E 001° 08.774
31T E 353490 N 4966916
Quick Description: The best view of this castle is from a canoe gliding down the Dordogne river. The interior is really quite remarkable - unspoilt and inspires one to imagine what it must have been like during the 100 years war.
Location: France
Date Posted: 1/5/2007 11:11:08 AM
Waymark Code: WM13PW
Views: 57
Long Description:The elderly owner (who still lives in apartments there) has
expressed a clear wish that it should not be turned into a tourist
attraction and yet must be available for the nation to enjoy.
Visit of the interior of the castle is by guided tour only (in
French).
This eagle's nest might seem rather austere if it were not for
the sun lighting up its golden walls, mirrored by the Dordogne.
With its changing colors and the luminosity of the stone, the sky
and the water, Beynac is a paradise for painters and photographers
in all seasons.
Following the Organization of the county of Périgord. it became
the seat of one of the four baronies along with Biron. Bourdeilles
and Mareuil. The first unquestionable trace of a seigneur of Beynac
dates back to 1115. The castle was so powerful and its barons so
cruel that local vassals and peasants named it "Satan's ark".
In 1214, on return from a crusade against the Albigensians.
Simon de Montfort took possession of Beynac. whose seigneur was a
friend of Raymond de Toulouse, and razed its defenses. The Hundred
Years War found Beynac in the French camp. In 1360, the Bretigny
treaty transferred it by right to English rule but eight years
later it returned to the fore of the fighting on the side of
Charles V. The English were never able to capture the citadel. In
1370, the sole heiress of the fief, a three year old girl is
promised in marriage to her uncle, Pons de Commarque who drove the
English out of the Sarlat region and became the most powerful
seigneur in Périgord.
The castle was totally protected by the sheer drop on the side
facing the river and its northern defenses were reinforced around
1598. A double surrounding wall, two rows of moats and two
barbicans were built. From the top of the tower there is a
breathtaking view over the whole of the valley and the surrounding
Châteaux of Castelnaud, Fayrac, and Marqueyssac. On the edge of the
cliff is the stone-roofed Romanesque castle chapel, the location of
the famous scene from the 1978 version of "Les Miserable".