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Castle dans le Calvados

Calvados

Castle

    367 Impasse de la Ferme du Château
    14240 Val de Drôme
Château
Château
Château
Château
Château
Crédit photo : Ikmo-ned - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1590
Death of Hervé de Longaunay
1er quart XVIIe siècle
Initial construction
XVIIe siècle (2e moitié)
Erection in marquisat
1810
Replacement of the drawbridge
1850
Construction of the South House
14 décembre 1928
Registration MH
Années 1970
Modern renovations
26 septembre 2000
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle and its outbuildings, and access: registration by order of 14 December 1928 - Porterie et colombier (C 54, placed le Colombier): classification by order of 26 September 2000

Key figures

Hervé IV de Longaunay - Lord and builder The castle was rebuilt in the 17th century.
Jean de Longaunay - Son of Hervé, leaguer Military warden of Saint-Lô.
François Gabriel - Architect assigned Designed wearing and dove (1610).
Marquis de Briges - Owner in the 19th century Owns the estate before 1891.
François Doynel de Sausserie - Last notable owner Dismember the domain (1924-1927).

Origin and history

The castle of Dampierre, located in the present municipality of Val de Drôme (Calvados, Normandy), is a building of the 1st quarter of the seventeenth century, rebuilt by Hervé IV de Longaunay on the bases of a medieval construction from which remains moat and foundations of towers. This close friend of Marshal Matignon, Lieutenant General of Henry IV, died in 1590 at the Battle of Ivry. His son, Jean de Longaunay, military intendant of Saint-Lô and leagueur, inherited the estate, erected as a marquisat in the 17th century. During the Revolution, the main house and the commons were destroyed, leaving only fragmentary structures.

The architecture of the castle combines limestone, brick and granite, typical of the Italian mannerist style. The portery (17th century), attributed to architect François Gabriel (ancestor of the royal Gabriels), and the domed domed roof restored after 1945, form a remarkable decorative ensemble. These elements, classified in 2000, contrast with the stone massif and the stone bridge, rebuilt in the 19th century (1810 for the bridge, 1850 for a new southern home). The medieval towers, remodeled by Hervé de Longaunay, preserve their brick scallops and skylights.

In the 19th century, the Marquis de Briges, then his nephew François Doynel de Sausserie (from 1891), owned the estate before its dismemberment between 1924 and 1927. The castle, registered in 1928, underwent major changes in the 1970s, partially altering its original structure. The alternating materials (red stone of Troisgots, Caen limestone) recall other works by Gabriel, such as the castles of Torigni-sur-Vire and Canisy, linked to the Matignon family.

The current protections distinguish: the castle and its outbuildings (registered in 1928), and the portery with the dovecote (classified in 2000). The latter, originally linked to the buildings of the court of honour (known as "the cannons"), illustrate Gabriel's architectural influence. The dovecote, with 1,800 preserved bolts, and the doorway to three doors (charrier and pedestrians) reflect the seigneurial fascist of the seventeenth century, despite the revolutionary destructions and subsequent changes.

External links