Chateau de Remehan
Castle visible from the outside, private property
The Château de Réméhan, located in Pouru-Saint-Remy, in the Ardennes, is a building steeped in history. Although little precise information is available about its past, it is said to have belonged to the Anglemont de Tassigny family for several centuries. Its illustrious owners include Jean Florentin Lambin d'Anglemont (1689-1715), lord of Anglemont and Réméhan, co-lord of Lombut, knight of the Royal and Military Order of Saint-Louis (1735), and his brother Charles Lambin d'Anglemont (1716-1758), who became lord of Réméhan in 1753. The latter, a bodyguard to the king and then a cavalry captain in the Chabot regiment (Crussol in 1747), died in camp from his injuries during the Seven Years' War.
In the 19th century, the estate passed to the Nonancourt family. The Château de Réméhan, once the residence of the Anglemont de Tassigny family, underwent a notable reconversion: today it is a stud farm dedicated to horse breeding, thus perpetuating an activity in harmony with its historical and natural setting.











