Found this castle on the internet, but have no idea where it is or its name. It looks French.

Thats cheatingChâteau de la Mothe-Chandeniers. Image search is your friend![]()
Must be the Greek in me always looking for shortcuts. An image search here, some tax evasion there, now a string-free bailout here...Thats cheating![]()
Before you know it you are up to your neck in pictures again and need another shot of Swabian austerity from the Graf. Just you see!Must be the Greek in me always looking for shortcuts. An image search here, some tax evasion there, now a string-free bailout here...![]()
But I don't wanna be a New South German!Before you know it you are up to your neck in pictures again and need another shot of Swabian austerity from the Graf. Just you see!
You don't choose the broom, the broom chooses you.But I don't wanna be a New South German!![]()
Damned right.You don't choose the broom, the broom chooses you.
Wasn't this the french chateau that the internet crowd-funded for restoration work.
I'm becoming a damn good Swabian Whisperer.Damned right.
As if Swabian wasn't hard enough to comprehend when spoken aloud...I'm becoming a damn good Swabian Whisperer.
That's just the way the photographer manipulated the colors in the photographAlso, the castle looks very Disney![]()
That's just the way the photographer manipulated the colors in the photograph
The Château de la Mothe-Chandeniers is a former stronghold of the Bauçay family, lords of Loudun. The stronghold dates to the thirteenth century and was originally called Motte Bauçay (or Baussay). The Motte Baussay was taken twice by the English in the Middle Ages and devastated during the French Revolution.
It was bought in 1809 by François Hennecart, a wealthy businessman. In 1857 it was sold to Baron Joseph Lejeune. In 1932, a major fire destroyed most of the buildings in the castle.[1]
In December 2017, 18,600 members of an online community raised €1,600,000, by paying at least €50 each, to purchase the castle with the aim of restoring it.
Hey I didn't say it wasn't pretty. Just that is isn't "Disney". By that I meant that the walls aren't painted white like that color-manipulated picture might indicate, they are actually naked sandstone which is not white at all. It's also not roofed so the rain will soak you wet, and the wind will howl through the unfurnished window openings at night unlike what you probably have in a proper Disney fairy tale castle. But our understanding of what makes a "Disney" quality might differNah, it's pretty and i presume build for that purpose. The defensive quality is definatly suspect with such thin walls even for towers and openings close to the ground. It has a lot of architectural elements that are purely there for aesthetics.