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Château de Pontécoulant dans le Calvados

Patrimoine classé
Maison forte
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de plaisance
Calvados

Château de Pontécoulant

    Le Château 
    14110 Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Château de Pontécoulant
Crédit photo : Angel2503 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XVIe siècle
Initial construction
XVIIe siècle
Major expansion
1777
East façade renovation
1908
Donation to the department
1927
MH classification
1939–1945
German occupation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle: inscription by decree of 26 March 1927

Key figures

Jehan Doulcet - Medieval Lord Owner of the fief late 14th century.
Léon-Armand Doulcet de Pontécoulant - Restorer of the domain Sells land to finance the works.
Marie Augustine Le Doulcet de Pontécoulant - Last heir Légua the castle in Calvados in 1908.
Louis-Gustave Doulcet de Pontécoulant - Politician Lives under Louis XV to Napoleon III.
Philippe Gustave Le Doulcet de Pontécoulant - Astronomy A lunar crater bears its name.
Pierre Bellemare - Writer and Moderator He prepared his certificate of study in 1939.

Origin and history

The Château de Pontécoulant, located in Calvados in Normandy, finds its origins in the 16th century as a strong house belonging to the family Le Doulcet de Pontécoulant. This first house, partially destroyed in 1562 by the Protestants, was rebuilt and enlarged over the centuries. In the 17th century, the manor house was extended one third southward, while symmetrical pavilions (hunting and gardener) and a dovecote were added, reflecting nobiliary privileges. The east façade was entirely rebuilt around 1777, modernizing the central wing and the adjoining housing units, while the interiors (living room, dining room) were redesigned in a more elegant style.

The Doulcet de Pontécoulant family, established on site since the 16th century, marked the history of the estate by its alliances and expensive lifestyle. In the 19th century, Léon-Armand Doulcet had to sell part of the land and furniture to finance the restoration of the castle. Without direct heirs, Marie Augustine Le Doulcet, wife of diplomat Edmond de Barrère, bequeathed the estate to the Calvados department in 1908, which transformed it into a museum. During World War II, the castle was briefly occupied by the Germans, even welcoming Marshal Rommel one night.

The park, classified among the remarkable gardens, combines landscape elements (water room, waterfall, cooler) and structured facilities (aisles, terraces). Created in the 18th century as a summer residence for the family — then divided between Caen and Paris — it was transformed into an English park in the 19th century. The castle, inscribed with historical monuments in 1927, preserves traces of its architectural evolution: dome towers, schist bellow facades, and granite frames. Its dovecote, symbol of nobility, and the entrance pavilions underline its status as a seigneurial domain.

Several personalities were associated with it, including Louis-Gustave Doulcet de Pontécoulant (1764–53), a politician who had passed through the regimes of Louis XV to Napoleon III, and his son Louis Adolphe, Count of Pontécoulant, military and musicologist. Another member, Philippe Gustave (1795–74), an astronomer, gave his name to a lunar crater. Later, the writer Pierre Bellemare (1929–2018) lived there as a child in 1939, evoking this stay in his memories. The estate, now a departmental property, houses a museum and a site classified since 1919.

External links