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Prehistory
at Commarque

The
Beune Valley has been occupied for a very long time. Around
Commarque, prehistoric man has left numerous traces of his
passage. Not far from the site at Commarque, Paleolithic man
left two female statuettes known as the Venus of Sireuil and
the Venus of Laussel.
On the other side of the valley, in the shelter at Cap Blanc,
one can admire a frieze of prehistoric sculptures. Under Commarque
Castle there is a cave where Magdalenian man carved animals
on the wall, notably a very beautiful life-sized horse (not
open to the public).
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The
Uncertain Origins of Commarque

The
most reasonable hypothesis would be to attribute the founding
of a keep at Commarque to one of the two abbots of the same
name who succeeded the abbey see of Sarlat during the last
third of the XIIth century: Garin (1169-1181) or Randolph
de Commarque (1195-1201). The building of a tower allowed
them to contain the ambitions of their vassals the Beynacs,
with whom they had a relationship of conflict. It was a member
of their family who obtained its guard. The first Lord of
Commarque, thus, was a "milites castri" or knight,
who followed orders from the Abbey of Sarlat. In the XIIth
century, a concentration of population existed there, made
up of a keep with living quarters, a chapel and house towers:
it was the castrum of Commarque.
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The
Beynacs, Lords of Commarque

There
is mention of Commarque in archive documents from 1255 onwards.
Maynard de Beynac became the lord of the château. The
house towers were held by the lineages of lesser nobles, the
names of several of which are known: the Commarque, the Cendrieux,
the Gondrix, the La Chapelle… Each house tower had an
enclosure, its own access, and ditches. The lord and knights
fought over the rights of justice, land and other property.
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The
Rise of the Beynacs

During
the course of the XIVth century, two major lineages had the
first regrouping of lands by successive acquisitions. The
Beynacs succeeded in constituting a veritable castellany around
Commarque when they retook the rights of Marquay and of Sireuil
from the Cendrieux and imposed their suzerainty on the den
of Laussel. The Commarques took back the lands and rights
from the descendants of the other knights, either by buying
them or through alliances. From the middle of the XIVth century,
the entire lower courtyard had become the noble house of the
Commarques: they now disposed of a defensive parameter largely
exceeding that of the Château of Beynac.
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The
Patrimony of the Beynacs Combined

In
1379 Pons de Beynac, Lord of Commarque, married Philippa,
12 years of age, heiress of the lords of Beynac. By this alliance,
the lords of Commarque acquired the castellany of Beynac and
its dependencies.
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The
Hundred Years' War

During
the Hundred Years' War, the Beynacs stayed faithful defenders
of the throne of France. Pons de Beynac enjoyed several political
favors: he was among the clients of Beaufort-Turenne, of the
Avignon papacy and of the Anjou party. The extension of Commarque
Castle between 1370 and 1380 has been attributed to him. He
undertook heightening the keep and the curtain wall, and had
the crown of machicolations built which was inspired by the
Palace of the Popes in Avignons.
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The
Decline of the Beynacs and the Commarques

Nevertheless,
the Beynacs came out of the Hundred Years' War badly. First
of all, in 1406, the English, driven by Archambaud d'Abzac,
seized hold of Commarque. The whole family was brought together
and made prisoner. A tax, ordered by the king, was levied
on the inhabitants of Perigord and Quercy to pay the ransom.
The castellany of Commarque began to break up. In 1395, Pons
lost the suzerainty over Laussel . He was unable to retain
Domme. And in 1441, the Beynacs went under the influence of
the Count of Perigord, a visible sign of their political weakening.
During the 1500s, it seems that the resident families had
already deserted the castrum of Commarque.
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The
Wars of Religion

During
the Wars of Religion, the Beynacs were loyal to the cause
of the Reform. From Commarque, which was his base of operation,
Geoffroy, Baron of Beynac and Lord of Commarque, launched
several attacks on Catholic hideouts in the area and even
furtively took hold of Sarlat. In 1569, Commarque Castle was
taken for the first time by the Catholics led by the seneschal
and by the Governor of Perigord. It is without doubt following
this siege that the vaulted room collapsed. As the new master
of Commarque, Geoffroy installed a garrison there which, by
way of reprisal, would be hanged the same year.
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The
Abandon and Renaissance of Commarque

Guy
de Beynac, the last castellan living in Commarque Castle,
died there in 1656. The site was definitively abandoned in
XVIIIth century. A century later the castle was in ruins.
In 1968, Hubert de Commarque bought his ancestors' ruins.
He undertook the consolidation of the most damaged parts.
Since 1994 there have been successive phases of consolidation
and restoration. Hubert of Commarque has given Kleber Rossillon,
the creator of the Museum of Medieval Warfare in Castelnaud
Castle and the Gardens of Marqueyssac, the task of opening
the Commarque site to the public. A program of archeological
research has been in place for several years.

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