Château de La Celle-lès-Bordes

Pierre de Harville bought the fief of La Celle in 1363, during the reign of King John II, when nothing remained of the monastery founded by Saint Germain.

[1] Claude de Harville (c. 1555–1636), Lord of Palaiseau and Champlan, inherited the fief of La Celle and married Catherine Juvénal des Ursins (c. 1560–1643) in 1579.

Protected by Henry IV, who made him State Councillor and Vice-Admiral of France, Count Harville had the current Château de La Celle built between 1610 and 1614.

1752), whose first husband, Louis Victoire Lux de Montmorin-Saint-Hérem, governor of Fontainebleau, was killed during the September Massacres of the French Revolution in 1792.

He then gave it as a dowry to his daughter, Louise Claire Cibiel (1839–1891), who married Count Arthur de Marsay (1836–1888).

[5] The kennel housed the team's pack, comprising around sixty tricolor dogs with black-white-tan coats.

View of the entrance gate and the castle on the right