Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château de Carantilly dans la Manche

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Manche

Château de Carantilly

    Le Château
    50570 Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Château de Carantilly
Crédit photo : Ikmo-ned - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
0
100
1100
1600
1700
1800
1900
1200
2000
Règne de Louis XVI
Expansion of the castle
16-17 novembre 1987
Devastating storm
XIe siècle (1096)
First Crusade
1660
Start of family possession
1796
Property plan and press
XVIIIe siècle
Construction of the current castle
4 septembre 1978
Classification and registration MH
11 septembre 1986
Farm registration
1999
New storm damage
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades (Case D 192): Order of 4 September 1978; Roofs; facades and roofs of communes; the staircase with its wrought iron ramp; the following rooms with their decor: small and large living room, dining room, bedroom and boudoir on the ground floor, blue room, two bedrooms to the south and one bedroom to the north on the first floor (cad. D 190): registration by order of 4 September 1978; Farm and courtyard: facades and roofs of the house of residence and the kennel, the barn and the cart, the stable, the stable and the bakery, the house of the administrator known as the house of the Etang and the washer; wall connecting the stable to the stable; entrance wall linking the house to the barn; walls of the vegetable garden; in the lower courtyard: press and its equipment, wall connecting the press to the west common of the castle; fronts and roofs of the pig house (cad. D 189, 190, 194, 196, 197, 202, 899) : entry by order of 11 September 1986

Key figures

Jean de Soule - First known lord Participated in the first crusade in 1096.
Louis Coudreau de Planchoury - Commander of the castle Fits build the castle for his daughter.
Antoinette-Catherine de Planchoury - Beneficiary of the castle Daughter of Louis Coudreau, initial recipient.
Thomas-Honoré de Mons - Gendre and owner Husband of Antoinette-Catherine, involved in the construction.
Léonor-Honoré de Mons - Magnifier of the castle Works during the reign of Louis XVI.
Rodolphe de Mons - Owner in 1987 Castle damaged under his possession.

Origin and history

The Château de Carantilly is a house in the commune of Carantilly, in the department of Manche, Normandy. Built on the bases of an older manor house, it was built in three construction campaigns throughout the 18th century, then enlarged under Louis XVI. The estate, still in the same family since 1660, was completed before the French Revolution, as evidenced by a plan of 1796.

The castle is partially protected from historical monuments: its facades are classified in 1978, while the roofs, the commons, the wrought iron staircase and several interior rooms are inscribed. The farm and the lower yard, dating from the 18th and 19th centuries, include an attested press in 1796, with traditional equipment still in place.

The estate suffered damage during the storms of 1987 and 1999, damaging the castle and ravaging the park. The first known lord, Jean de Soule, dating back to the 11th century, had accompanied the Duke of Normandy Robert Courteheuse to the first crusade. However, the present castle is linked to the family of Mons, including Louis Coudreau de Planchoury, Thomas-Honoré de Mons and Léonor-Honoré de Mons, who marked its architectural history.

The protected elements also include outbuildings such as stables, bakery, laundry, and the garden wall. The press, built in shale and earth, keeps a wooden wheel and a long-knit press, testimonies of past agricultural activities.

Today, the castle remains an example of Norman noble architecture, mixing medieval heritage, transformations of the Lights and traces of rural activities of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

External links