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Château de Silleron à Angiens en Seine-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Louis XIII
Seine-Maritime

Château de Silleron

    Rue du Château
    76740 Angiens
Crédit photo : Paubry - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1617
Construction begins
1643
Addition of the chapel
1758
Alliance transmission
1910
Acquisition by Eudeville
1920
West Wing Construction
2008
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The castle and its castral enclosure (Box B 129, 398, Placed Silleron) with all the fence, buildings and garden facilities and the pond, in full; old buildings of the farm (cad. B 381, placed Silleron) with the exception of the south-east barn: registration by order of 17 November 2008

Key figures

Vivien de Clercy - Initial constructor Started work in 1617.
Jacques de Clercy - Son of Vivien Add chapel and pavilion (1643).
Marie-Charlotte de Clercy - Inheritance Transmitted the estate in 1758.
Henri d’Eudeville - Owner since 1910 Today's Detainor Family.
Flavigny - Architect Change the interiors around 1950.

Origin and history

The castle of Silleron, located in the commune of Angiens (Seine-Maritime, Normandy), is an aristocratic residence built from 1617 by Vivien de Clercy, then enlarged by his son Jacques in 1643 with the addition of a chapel and an isolated pavilion. The estate, which is representative of the sword nobility of the Ancien Régime, illustrates the Louis XIII style in its brick facades, its sandstone chains and its two monumental porches. The west wing, built in 1920 identical to the eastern wing, completes the architectural ensemble, while the chapel preserves Louis XIII woodwork and a cross-reliquary.

The castle passed into the hands of several noble families by successive alliances: the de Clercy (original builders), the Toustain-Limésy (from 1758 via Marie-Charlotte de Clercy), then the Marquis de Faudoas, the Bagneux, and the Polignac. In 1910, Count Henri d'Eudeville acquired the estate, whose family still owns today. The interiors were modified around 1950 by architect Flavigny, but the whole preserved its historical character, as evidenced by its inscription in historical monuments in 2008.

The site, closed to the public, includes a castral enclosure with gardens, a pond, and partially protected agricultural buildings. Its architecture combines defensive elements (fortified doors) and residential elements, reflecting the evolution of the needs of the Norman nobility between the seventeenth and twentieth centuries. The sources mention its heritage importance, underlined by references in specialized works such as those of Philippe Seydoux or the collection Le Patrimoine des Communes.

External links