. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Ch\u00E2teau de Calamane"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "2133"^^ . "Le ch\u00E2teau de Calamane est situ\u00E9 sur la commune de Calamane, dans le d\u00E9partement du Lot."@fr . "1.394000053405762"^^ . . "POINT(1.3940000534058 44.523101806641)"^^ . . "44.5231 1.394" . . . . . . "Ch\u00E2teau de Calamane"@fr . . . "Le ch\u00E2teau de Calamane est situ\u00E9 sur la commune de Calamane, dans le d\u00E9partement du Lot."@fr . . . "44.52310180664062"^^ . . . . . "The Ch\u00E2teau de Calamane is a castle in the commune of Calamane in the Lot d\u00E9partement of France. The castle was built at the end of the 15th century and was sold as a national property in 1796. It is formed of a quadrangular corps de logis flanked, on the north side, by two large cylindrical towers; the tops were removed during the French Revolution. The south side is flanked by a polygonal tower with a spiral staircase. The entrance doorway and the bay which opens above it, are framed with pinnacled pilasters and decorated with cabbages. The castle has suffered much damage and deterioration over the centuries, from the Hundred Years' War to the French Revolution. The ruins were bought in 1862 by the great-great-grandfater of the present owner, who has restored it. Inside are chimney places and a plafond \u00E0 la fran\u00E7aise (French-style ceiling: joists the same width as the spaces between them; see Plafond \u00E0 la fran\u00E7aise in French Wikipedia). The Ch\u00E2teau de Calamane is privately owned. It has been listed since 1929 as a monument historique by the French Ministry of Culture. Though not generally open to the public, parts are opened on special heritage days."@en . "1015029512"^^ . . "35827134"^^ . . . . . . . . "The Ch\u00E2teau de Calamane is a castle in the commune of Calamane in the Lot d\u00E9partement of France. The castle was built at the end of the 15th century and was sold as a national property in 1796. It is formed of a quadrangular corps de logis flanked, on the north side, by two large cylindrical towers; the tops were removed during the French Revolution. The south side is flanked by a polygonal tower with a spiral staircase. The entrance doorway and the bay which opens above it, are framed with pinnacled pilasters and decorated with cabbages."@en . .