Construction of rotunda limite XVIIIe-XIXe siècle (≈ 1865)
Italian rural style, uncertain use
1881
Development of the chapel
Development of the chapel 1881 (≈ 1881)
By the Firmin-Didot family, neo-Renaissance style
1961
Destruction of the castle
Destruction of the castle 1961 (≈ 1961)
Only rotunda and chapel remain
23 mars 1999
Classification of remains
Classification of remains 23 mars 1999 (≈ 1999)
Rotunda inscription and chapel (cf. G 32)
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The rotunda and the chapel (cad. G 32): inscription by decree of 23 March 1999
Key figures
Famille Firmin-Didot - Owner and patron
Set up the chapel in 1881
Origin and history
Chandai Castle, now destroyed, was an iconic monument located in Orne, Normandy. Built at the hinge of the 18th and 19th centuries, it blended rural and Italian influences, as evidenced by its brick and flint rotunda. This building, whose exact use (warehouse, attic?) remains uncertain, illustrates the architectural experiments of the period, between local tradition and foreign inspirations.
The chapel of the castle, also made of brick and flint, was built in 1881 in an old tower by the Firmin-Didot family. This redevelopment is part of the neo-Renaissance current, reflecting the aesthetic tastes of 19th-century industrial aristocracy. Although the castle was razed in 1961, these two elements — the rotunda and the chapel — were preserved and classified as Historical Monuments in 1999, offering a fragmentary overview of its past.
The location of the site, at 5 rue des Forges in Chandai, remains approximate (estimated at 6/10), but its official address and registration in the cadastre (park G 32) attest to its anchoring in the Norman heritage. The remains, although reduced, recall the importance of seigneurial and then bourgeois residences in the social and economic organization of the region in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.