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Castle à Flesselles dans la Somme

Somme

Castle

    111 Rue du Château
    80260 Flesselles
Crédit photo : isamiga76 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
début XIVe siècle
Construction of the first castle
1744
Buy by Alexandre Nicolas de Bray
1747
Construction of the existing housing body
XVIIe siècle
New castle for the Brégy
vers 1780
Addition of neo-classical portal
1976
Sale of the estate and subdivision
1979
Historical Monument
1985
Partial restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades, roofs of the castle; staircase with its wooden baluster ramp and dining room and living room with their decoration on the ground floor (cad. E 813) : entry by order of 31 July 1979

Key figures

Guillaume de Saveuse - Lord of Flesselles in the 14th century Sponsor of the first tower castle.
Famille Brégy de Flesselles - Owners in the 17th century Builders of a new brick castle.
Alexandre Nicolas de Bray - Acquirer in 1744 Order the current house and pavilion corps.
Architecte Rousseau - Speaker around 1780 Suspected author of the neo-classical portal.
Charles de Chévigné - Owner in the 19th century Expands the park and remakes the interior.

Origin and history

The castle of Flesselles is organized around a large rectangular courtyard open to the north, lined with buildings with various materials: chalk, brick, stone and torchi. The main house body, in chalk and covered with slate, dominates the south side, while the west wing incorporates a circular arched tower, medieval vestige. The commons, built of brick and stone or torchi, reflect architectural evolutions between the 17th and 18th centuries, with a neoclassical portal added around 1780.

The seigneury of Flesselles, attested from the 12th century, saw its first castle erected at the beginning of the 14th century by Guillaume de Saveuse, of which a tower remains. In the 17th century, the Brégy de Flesselles family built a new castle, of which there remains a brick reception room. In 1744, Alexandre Nicolas de Bray acquired the estate and built the current house and a pavilion in 1747. The architect Rousseau intervened around 1780 to add a neo-classical portal link building. In the 19th century, Charles de Chévigné enlarged the park, introduced rare plant species and replanted the interior, before the estate was sold in 1976 and partially converted into a subdivision.

Ranked a Historic Monument in 1979 for its facades, roofs, staircases and decorated lounges, the castle was restored in 1985 by its owner. Only remains of the fence wall recall the park's former hold, now extinct. The building thus combines medieval traces, classical additions and modern transformations, testifying to seven centuries of seigneurial and architectural history.

External links