Guided tour of the exterior of the castle
The castle of Chambon la Forêt has an ancient origin. In 1403, it belonged to Jean d'Angeliers, lord of Chambon. In 1417, during the hundred-year war, it was fortified by the king’s supporters to form with Yèvres the Chastel, Courcelles and Mousseaux a band of advanced positions intended to protect Orléans against the English who had seized Etampes and Beaumont. After the destruction of the hundred-year war, and then of the religious wars, the castle was rebuilt in 1590. He belonged to the Count of Lucerne (1737-1799), minister of the Navy of Louis XVI, and to his brother, the cardinal of Lucerne, bishop of Langres (1738-1821). From its warrior past, it has retained two massive towers, but the architecture of the other facade where the brick dominates recalls that of the castles of Sologne.