Construction of the castral motte XIe siècle (≈ 1150)
Residence of the chestnut, symbol of the Comtal power.
XIIe siècle
Affirming Royal Power
Affirming Royal Power XIIe siècle (≈ 1250)
Transition to the king's bailis.
1762
Construction of prison
Construction of prison 1762 (≈ 1762)
Built on the site of the old castle.
2003
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 2003 (≈ 2003)
Protection of the moth and prison.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The castral mot, with its access portal; the former prison with its portal (case AT 80): registration by decree of 30 April 2003
Key figures
Châtelain - Representative of the Count of Flanders
Lived in the moth in the 11th century.
Baillis du roi de France - Representatives of the Royal Authority
The site was occupied after the Counts.
Origin and history
The castral motte of Saint-Omer, one of the most imposing in the region by its diameter and rare example preserved in urban areas, symbolizes the origins of the city and the progressive affirmation of political power. First residence of the chestnut, representative of the Count of Flanders, it then became the seat of the bailis of the king of France, thus marking the transition between the Comtal and the Royal authorities. Its historical importance is also due to its proximity to the neighbouring cathedral ensemble, illustrating the bipolarity of the spiritual and temporal powers that structured the city from its foundation.
In the 12th century, the site already embodied seigneurial control, before seeing its role evolve with the construction of a prison in 1762, most probably on the foundations of the old castle. This judicial building, integrated into the motte, perpetuates the memory of the political and judicial authority exercised in Saint-Omer since the Middle Ages. The present parcellar also preserves the traces of this medieval organization, where the mott and the cathedral formed two complementary poles of power, one temporal, the other spiritual.
Ranked as a Historic Monument in 2003, the castral mound and its access portal, as well as the old prison with its own portal, today bear witness to nearly a millennium of institutional history. Their preservation offers a rare example of continuity between a medieval fortress and a modern judicial infrastructure, while stressing the central role of Saint-Omer in the regional administration, from the Counts of Flanders to the Kings of France.
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