The Château d'Ussé is located in the commune of Rigny-Ussé in the Indre-et-Loire
département, in France. An 11th century stronghold first fortified by
the Norman lord of Ussé, Gueldin de Saumur who surrounded the fort with
a palissade on a high terrace at the edge of the Chinon forest
overlooking the Indre Valley. The site passed to the Comte de Blois, who
rebuilt in stone.
In the fifteenth century, the ruined castle of Ussé was purchased
by Jean V de Bueil, a captain-general of Charles VII who became seigneur
of Ussé in 1456 and began rebuilding it in the 1460s; his son Antoine de
Bueil married in 1462 Jeanne de Valois, the natural daughter of Charles
VII and Agnès Sorel, who brought as dowry 40000 golden écus. Antoine was
heavily in debt and in 1485, sold the château to Jacques d’Espinay, son
of a chamberlain to the Duke of Brittany and himself chamberlain to the
king; Espinay built the chapel, completed by his son Charles in 1538, in
which the Flamboyant Gothic style is mixed with new Renaissance motifs,
and began the process of rebuilding the fifteenth-century château that
resulted in the sixteenth-seventeenth century aspect of the structure to
be seen today.
In the seventeeenth century Louis I de Valentinay, comptroller of
the royal household, demolished the north range of buildings in order to
open the interior court to the spectacular view over the parterre
terrace, to a design ascribed to André Le Nôtre. Valentinay's son-in-law
was the military engineer Vauban, who visited Ussé on numerous
occasions. The tradition maintained at Ussé is that this was the castle
Charles Perrault had in mind when writing "Sleeping Beauty". Later Ussé
passed to the Rohan. In 1807 Ussé was purchased by the duc de Duras;
here François-René de Chateaubriand worked on his Mémoires d'
Outre-Tombe as the Duchess's guest.
In 1885 the comtesse de la Rochejacquelin bequeathed Ussé to her
great-nephew, the comte de Blacas. Today the château belongs to his
descendent.