France (47)Burgundy (1)Chateau Chinon (1)House #5795

Gîte du bon Goût

Type: House • Bedrooms: 2 • Sleeps: 6 • Catering: Self-catering

Price per week: 375.00 €

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Rates & avialability per week

Period Price
Low season 375.00 € Change currency
Mid season 450.00 € Change currency
High season 525.00 € Change currency
  • Cleaning: 50 Euro
  • Linnen: 5 Euro/bed
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Reservations & Contacts

Gîte du bon Goût/Ref: 5795
Owner Name Mrs Inne Lambrecht
Tel 003247539911
E-mail email Send E-mail
* Please, mention HolidayHomes.ORG
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Home description

In the South of the Morvan, at the feet of the Haut Folin, the highest point of the Morvan, lays the little village. The shortest town nearby is Château-Chinon. Almost in your backyard, the river, the Yonne springs.

This quit and wooded environment, where deer rooming around in your garden in the evening and you got awoken by the whistle of colourful birds, is THE place to relax and to enjoy what pure nature has to offer.

Next to this, there are …. Lots of possibilities to get some sporty entertainment such as: mountain bike, horseback riding, canoe or kayak, surfing, rafting …

Or did you have some hanging around in the garden in your mind? Or seeing the beautiful cities Autun, Nevers or Dijon a cultural visit? Or are you rather staying at the borders of one of the sparkling clear lakes the Morvan offers to everybody’s ability and wish.

Location

Chinon is a town and commune of the Indre-et-Loire département in France. Chinon is located in the Vallée de la Vienne (Vienne River valley). It is situated on the banks of the Vienne River.

The importance of Chinon derives from its position on the bank of the Vienne river, just before it joins the Loire. From prehistoric times, the rivers of France formed the major trade routes, and the Vienne joins the fertile southern plains of the Poitou and the city of Limoges to the mighty thoroughfare of the Loire, thus giving access to the sea at the port of Nantes on the western coast, and to the Île-de-France in the east. Chinon offers an easy crossing point by means of a central island in the Vienne, and the rocks dominating the shore provided not only a natural fort, but also protection against the annual flooding of the river.

Sitting high on a plateau, a huge ruined castle dominates the town. The site appears to have been used for a Gallo-Roman castrum. Towards the end of the 4th century, a follower of St Martin, St Mexme, established first a hermitage, and then a monastery on the eastern slope of the town. This foundation flourished in the Early Middle Ages, with a large and highly decorated church, a cloister and a square of canons' residences. Unfortunately the all too familiar pattern of Huguenot damage in the sixteenth century, followed by closure and partial demolition during the Revolution of 1789 and onwards has left only a much-damaged facade and tower, although the building is now being restored as a cultural centre.

The mount of Chinon was fortified as a stronghold by Theobald I, Count of Blois in the year 954. In the 12th century Chinon, located in (then)Kingdom of Anjou, which was then independent of the kingdom of France, was a primary residence of Henry II (Angevin King and King of England) and served with Poitiers and Bordeaux as a key southern capital of the vast Angevin holdings. Henry was responsible for construction of almost all of the massive chateau, built over 1,300 feet long and 250 feet wide with a clock tower (14th century) rising 115 feet high. King Henry died in Chinon castle after being defeated by his sons Rchard and John in a rebellion aided by Phillip Augustus of France; he, his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, and their son King Richard the Lionheart were all buried at nearby Fontevraud Abbey.

The castle is divided, along its length, into three enclosures, each separated by a deep dry moat. The easternmost is known as Fort St.-Georges, the central called the Château de Milieu, while the westernmost is known as the Fort du Coudray. In the early 13th century, following the Capetian annexation of Anjou, a cylindrical keep similar to those at Rouen and Paris, was added by Phillip II Augustus, King of France to the entrance of the Fort du Coudray.

In the keep or donjon, called the Tour de Coudray, Templar knights were imprisoned during the brutal suppression of the Templar Order that occurred in 1307. Some of the prisoners carved odd symbols into the walls of their cells: Hearts, Stars of David, grids, and other geometrical patterns. It is unknown if they were random symbols, or represented a code of some type.[1]

The chateau was a residence of Charles VII, the Dauphin of France in the early 15th century. Joan of Arc arrived at the castle, at the beginning of her quest to liberate France from the English; March 8, 1429; it was here that she recognized the Dauphin from amongst his courtiers, a feat which helped to persuade him to accede to her urging to declare himself king and raise an army to liberate France.

In 1562 the chateau came into the possession of the Huguenots and was turned into a state prison by Henri IV of France. After that it was abandoned until 1793 when, during the Reign of Terror, the castle was temporarily occupied by Vendeans. Soon though, it was left to decay until Emperor Napoleon III began a partial effort at restoration. Today, it is managed by the Town of Chinon and is a major tourist attraction. Since 1840, the castle has been recognised as a monument historique by the French Ministry of Culture.