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Castle of the Isle-Marie à Picauville dans la Manche

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Manche

Castle of the Isle-Marie

    469 L'Isle Marie
    50360 Picauville
Crédit photo : Larayevire - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1100
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
996
Construction of the first castle
1024
Prison of Robert I of Normandy
1026
Latin mention *Holmus*
1649
Taking during the Fronde
1673
Construction of the chapel
1675
Creation of the disabled hospital
1900
Neogothic restoration
2001
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The 11th century circular enclosure; the house of the seventeenth century, in its entirety; the facades and roofs of the chapel, as well as the cemetery and its enclosure; the facades and roofs of the invalid hospital, as well as the interior staircase and its cage; facades and roofs of the building adjacent to the hospital, for use by stables; the dovecote; two garden pavilions and the walls of the old greenhouse connecting them; the latrines pavilion; the park, with its woods, its two access avenues, its grove of palm trees and its fence walls, including the exhedral wall (cad. D 556, placedit Le Grand Jacquais, 558, placedit Le Rond-Point, 559, 560, placedit Les Bouquetots, 564, placedit Petites Marjolines, 571, 572, 747 to 750, placedit L'Isle-Marie, 573 to 575, placedit Bastions, 577, placedit L'Ile-Marais): inscription by order of 13 September 2001

Key figures

Richard II de Normandie - Duke of Normandy (996–1026) He locked up his son Robert I.
Richard III de Normandie - Duke of Normandy (1026–1027) Offered the fortress as a dowry.
Bernardin Gigault de Bellefonds - Marshal of France (1630–198) Transformed the estate in the 17th century.
Jules Hardouin-Mansart - Architect (1646–1708) Designed the chapel in 1673.
François Goyon de Matignon - Lieutenant-General Slinging The castle was taken in 1649.
Barbey d’Aurevilly - Writer (1808–89) Inspired from the castle for a novel.

Origin and history

The Château de l'Isle-Marie, located in Picauville in the English Channel, is a 17th century residence built near an ancient medieval fortress called the Man or Holm. This strategic site, attested as early as 1026 under the Latin name Holmus, controlled the river and land tracks at the borders of the Cotentin marshes, between the Ouve and Merderet rivers. Its name of Scandinavian origin (holmr, meaning "island") reflects its island character during winter floods. The circular enclosure of the eleventh century, still visible, bears witness to its defensive role under the Dukes of Normandy, such as Richard II or Robert the Magnificent.

The medieval fortress, mentioned in 996, was a major political issue: Richard III of Normandy offered as a dowry to his wife Adèle in 1026, and it served as a prison for Robert I in 1024. In the 12th century, it passed into the hands of the families of Agneaux and Aux Paules, before being involved in the conflicts of the Hundred Years War. In 1649, during the Fronde, François Goyon de Matignon took over at the expense of the Bellefonds, which transformed it into a residential estate in the 17th century.

Marshal Bernardin Gigault of Bellefonds (1630–198), owner from 1675, built a manor house for disabled soldiers and a chapel designed by Jules Hardouin-Mansart. This chapel houses the embalmed heart of his son, who died at the Battle of Steinkirk (1692). The estate, rebuilt in Gothic Revival style in 1900 by architect Drancey, preserves remains of a bastioned enclosure at the Vauban, partially destroyed in 1830. The castle, inscribed in historical monuments in 2001, also inspires literature, as in What does not die of Barbey d-Aurevilly (1884).

The present building, 100 metres from the old fortress, combines a body of rectangular houses flanked by circular towers (17th century), a dovecote, and commons. The English-speaking park, replacing old canals, includes a palm grove and classified fence walls. The excavations still reveal the 11th century circular enclosure, a deep ditch, and the traces of a medieval lowyard with a renovated chapel.

The site, strategic since the ducal era, illustrates the evolution of the Norman fortresses: from the vicus of the 10th century (cited in the charters of Richard I) to the aristocratic residence of the 17th to 20th centuries. Its history reflects the power struggles in Normandy, from Vikings to the wars of Religion, through the Fronde. Today, it bears witness to this historical stratification, between medieval remains and modern transformations.

External links