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- Surface2 500 m²
- Rooms40
- Bathroom10
- Plot size304 ha
“A quasi-royal château” - The finest and most outstanding 18th-century château in Anjou
6 000 000 €
Descriptif du bien
“A quasi-royal château” - The finest and most outstanding 18th-century château in Anjou
300 hectares - Private racecourse -17th–18th century architecture - Magnificent park designed by Edouard André - Sumptuous 18th-century interior decoration featuring marble and wood paneling - Private racecourse - Listed historic monument - 300 km from Paris, Angers, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire.
Set within 300 hectares, this property of royal appearance, owned in the 19th century by descendants of the English royal family, stands as one of the most brilliant and sumptuous historic estates in western France, both for its classical 17th- and 18th-century architecture, its park designed by the great landscape architect Edouard André (notably responsible for the Monte Carlo park), and its interior decoration marked by superb 18th-century woodwork, a grand gallery, and a sumptuous marble salon; all overlooking, with a magnificent view, a rare private racecourse still in operation.
The majestic private avenue, over one kilometer long and lined with century-old plane trees, winds through the park, offering superb vistas, and leads to a grand perspective revealing the most beautiful, brilliant, and elegant 18th-century château in Anjou, after passing through classical gardens of topiary, pools, and fountains.
This property, described as “quasi-royal,” is clearly inspired by the Palace of Versailles: three grand approach perspectives, a U-shaped courtyard around a 17th-century building begun in 1635 and expanded in the 18th century with two lateral wings of outbuildings opening onto inner courtyards, and an east–west orientation capturing sunlight throughout the day.
Beyond the gate and the ha-has, the château’s elegant courtyard is overlooked by a statue of Minerva symbolizing peace. A series of French windows leads into a sumptuous 24-meter-long through gallery, adorned with monumental columns, cabochon flooring, flooded with light, and opening onto the garden through eight French windows with a magnificent axial view. On the park side, a grand and elegant double staircase leads to the first floor.
At one end of the gallery, a majestic staircase with a beautiful, airy flight of stone steps and wrought-iron railing leads to the upper floor. Behind it lies a wood-paneled library with cabochon flooring, opening onto the garden at ground level. A through chapel, accessible from both inside and outside, features a superb main altar with a large carved wooden altarpiece with pilasters, Corinthian capitals, twisted columns with vine scrolls, and three paintings: The Flight into Egypt, The Adoration of the Magi, and The Visitation, along with a crucifix. Painted and armorial stained glass from the 16th century depict a knight and Saint James.
At the other end of the gallery, a fine 18th-century wood-paneled salon with a marble fireplace opens onto the garden, the dining room, and the grand marble salon. The marble salon, directly inspired by the Salon of War and Salon of Peace at Versailles, occupies a neoclassical pavilion built specifically in 1780. With 6-meter ceilings and 8.4 meters beneath the dome, flooded with light from six large French windows, this 80 m² salon features sumptuous 18th-century decoration in French marble, mirrors, pilasters with Ionic capitals, medallions, a marble fireplace with gilded bronze and Italian micro-mosaics, marble mosaic flooring, and 18th-century Italian marble marquetry panels. Two terracotta overdoor panels bear inscriptions reflecting Enlightenment ideals. Beneath a monumental domed ceiling with trellis decoration and a balustraded gallery, its dual east and south exposure offers a splendid dominant view of the racecourse. It is one of the most exceptional 18th-century private interiors in France.
A sumptuous neoclassical rotunda built in 1905 houses the grand dining room, adorned with superb natural oak 18th-century wood paneling. With 5.5-meter ceilings and 70 m² of space, it opens through three French windows onto the south terrace, decorated with a beautiful Italian pergola.
Also on the ground floor: a smaller wood-paneled dining room, a vast theatrical staircase hall with wrought-iron railing, and a refined small salon with a marble fireplace. The spacious and bright kitchen opens onto the courtyard and retains fine original elements, complemented by three charming back kitchens and a breakfast room. Practical spaces include a boot room, laundry room, office, and guest facilities with early 20th-century character.
On the main floor, the central section offers three large bedrooms richly decorated with 18th-century wood paneling, each with its own bathroom, while the south wing includes five additional bedrooms with several bathrooms, including a remarkable room decorated in Siena yellow marble. Upper levels provide numerous additional bedrooms, service areas, an independent apartment, and attics.
The north wing, partly used for reception, includes a series of elegant reception rooms on the ground floor and a large through hall. The upper floors, in need of restoration, offer significant potential with many bedrooms and bathrooms enhanced by quality historic décor.
The property also features extensive vaulted cellars and a swimming pool located to the south with a commanding view over the racecourse.
Outbuildings:
Stable courtyard to the north: stables, accommodations, former poultry houses.
Service courtyard to the south: caretaker’s house, office, laundry.
Indoor riding arena converted into a reception hall: 250 seated, 500 standing.
A splendid 18th-century orangery facing south.
A walled kitchen garden.
An Italian-style garden inspired by the 18th century, created in the early 20th century with its pergola.
Park by Edouard André, created in the early 20th century, featuring remarkable architectural elements, balustrades, avenues, and monumental stone staircases.
Rare 300-hectare estate, partly leased under agricultural tenancy.
Racecourse under lease, created in 1850, one of the oldest in France (Chantilly dates from 1838), approximately 35 hectares, English-style track, two ponds, stands, 150-seat restaurant, parking capacity up to 5,000 visitors, six race meetings per year.
Historic monument protection: façades and roofs of the château and its outbuildings, the chapel and dining room with their décor, the formal gardens, terraces and balustrades (plots A [hidden information]) listed by decree of June 18, 1975; the marble salon and its pavilion (plot A 178) classified by decree of June 18, 1979.
Location:
-326 km from Paris (3h10 by car)
-42 km from Angers (TGV station, Paris in 1h22)
-133 km from Le Mans 24-hour circuit
-96 km from Nantes airport
Price: €6,000,000 including fees (paid by the seller). Exclusive listing by Denniel Immobilier – Antiquaires en Immeubles
Provenance:
-1635–1886: construction and expansion by the same Angevin aristocratic family; estate elevated to a marquisate in the 17th century
-1825: ducal family descended from the English royal family
-1886: sold to the family of the current owners
300 hectares - Private racecourse -17th–18th century architecture - Magnificent park designed by Edouard André - Sumptuous 18th-century interior decoration featuring marble and wood paneling - Private racecourse - Listed historic monument - 300 km from Paris, Angers, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire.
Set within 300 hectares, this property of royal appearance, owned in the 19th century by descendants of the English royal family, stands as one of the most brilliant and sumptuous historic estates in western France, both for its classical 17th- and 18th-century architecture, its park designed by the great landscape architect Edouard André (notably responsible for the Monte Carlo park), and its interior decoration marked by superb 18th-century woodwork, a grand gallery, and a sumptuous marble salon; all overlooking, with a magnificent view, a rare private racecourse still in operation.
The majestic private avenue, over one kilometer long and lined with century-old plane trees, winds through the park, offering superb vistas, and leads to a grand perspective revealing the most beautiful, brilliant, and elegant 18th-century château in Anjou, after passing through classical gardens of topiary, pools, and fountains.
This property, described as “quasi-royal,” is clearly inspired by the Palace of Versailles: three grand approach perspectives, a U-shaped courtyard around a 17th-century building begun in 1635 and expanded in the 18th century with two lateral wings of outbuildings opening onto inner courtyards, and an east–west orientation capturing sunlight throughout the day.
Beyond the gate and the ha-has, the château’s elegant courtyard is overlooked by a statue of Minerva symbolizing peace. A series of French windows leads into a sumptuous 24-meter-long through gallery, adorned with monumental columns, cabochon flooring, flooded with light, and opening onto the garden through eight French windows with a magnificent axial view. On the park side, a grand and elegant double staircase leads to the first floor.
At one end of the gallery, a majestic staircase with a beautiful, airy flight of stone steps and wrought-iron railing leads to the upper floor. Behind it lies a wood-paneled library with cabochon flooring, opening onto the garden at ground level. A through chapel, accessible from both inside and outside, features a superb main altar with a large carved wooden altarpiece with pilasters, Corinthian capitals, twisted columns with vine scrolls, and three paintings: The Flight into Egypt, The Adoration of the Magi, and The Visitation, along with a crucifix. Painted and armorial stained glass from the 16th century depict a knight and Saint James.
At the other end of the gallery, a fine 18th-century wood-paneled salon with a marble fireplace opens onto the garden, the dining room, and the grand marble salon. The marble salon, directly inspired by the Salon of War and Salon of Peace at Versailles, occupies a neoclassical pavilion built specifically in 1780. With 6-meter ceilings and 8.4 meters beneath the dome, flooded with light from six large French windows, this 80 m² salon features sumptuous 18th-century decoration in French marble, mirrors, pilasters with Ionic capitals, medallions, a marble fireplace with gilded bronze and Italian micro-mosaics, marble mosaic flooring, and 18th-century Italian marble marquetry panels. Two terracotta overdoor panels bear inscriptions reflecting Enlightenment ideals. Beneath a monumental domed ceiling with trellis decoration and a balustraded gallery, its dual east and south exposure offers a splendid dominant view of the racecourse. It is one of the most exceptional 18th-century private interiors in France.
A sumptuous neoclassical rotunda built in 1905 houses the grand dining room, adorned with superb natural oak 18th-century wood paneling. With 5.5-meter ceilings and 70 m² of space, it opens through three French windows onto the south terrace, decorated with a beautiful Italian pergola.
Also on the ground floor: a smaller wood-paneled dining room, a vast theatrical staircase hall with wrought-iron railing, and a refined small salon with a marble fireplace. The spacious and bright kitchen opens onto the courtyard and retains fine original elements, complemented by three charming back kitchens and a breakfast room. Practical spaces include a boot room, laundry room, office, and guest facilities with early 20th-century character.
On the main floor, the central section offers three large bedrooms richly decorated with 18th-century wood paneling, each with its own bathroom, while the south wing includes five additional bedrooms with several bathrooms, including a remarkable room decorated in Siena yellow marble. Upper levels provide numerous additional bedrooms, service areas, an independent apartment, and attics.
The north wing, partly used for reception, includes a series of elegant reception rooms on the ground floor and a large through hall. The upper floors, in need of restoration, offer significant potential with many bedrooms and bathrooms enhanced by quality historic décor.
The property also features extensive vaulted cellars and a swimming pool located to the south with a commanding view over the racecourse.
Outbuildings:
Stable courtyard to the north: stables, accommodations, former poultry houses.
Service courtyard to the south: caretaker’s house, office, laundry.
Indoor riding arena converted into a reception hall: 250 seated, 500 standing.
A splendid 18th-century orangery facing south.
A walled kitchen garden.
An Italian-style garden inspired by the 18th century, created in the early 20th century with its pergola.
Park by Edouard André, created in the early 20th century, featuring remarkable architectural elements, balustrades, avenues, and monumental stone staircases.
Rare 300-hectare estate, partly leased under agricultural tenancy.
Racecourse under lease, created in 1850, one of the oldest in France (Chantilly dates from 1838), approximately 35 hectares, English-style track, two ponds, stands, 150-seat restaurant, parking capacity up to 5,000 visitors, six race meetings per year.
Historic monument protection: façades and roofs of the château and its outbuildings, the chapel and dining room with their décor, the formal gardens, terraces and balustrades (plots A [hidden information]) listed by decree of June 18, 1975; the marble salon and its pavilion (plot A 178) classified by decree of June 18, 1979.
Location:
-326 km from Paris (3h10 by car)
-42 km from Angers (TGV station, Paris in 1h22)
-133 km from Le Mans 24-hour circuit
-96 km from Nantes airport
Price: €6,000,000 including fees (paid by the seller). Exclusive listing by Denniel Immobilier – Antiquaires en Immeubles
Provenance:
-1635–1886: construction and expansion by the same Angevin aristocratic family; estate elevated to a marquisate in the 17th century
-1825: ducal family descended from the English royal family
-1886: sold to the family of the current owners
- 300 hectares - Private racecourse -17th–18th century architecture - Magnificent park designed by Edouard André - Sumptuous 18th-century interior decoration featuring marble and wood paneling - Private racecourse - Listed historic monument - 300 km from Paris, Angers, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire.
- Swimming pool : Yes
- Surface : 2 500 m²
- Rooms : 40
- Bedrooms : 25
- Bathroom : 10
- Plot size : 304 ha
- Location : Angers 49000
- Reference : VM606


Additional information
Fees to be paid by the seller. Not subject to DPE. Information on the risks to which this property is exposed is available on the Geohazards website: georisques.gouv.fr.

