Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château d' Anglesqueville-les-Murs à Saint-Sylvain en Seine-Maritime

Château d' Anglesqueville-les-Murs

    545 Rue du Château
    76460 Saint-Sylvain
Private property
Crédit photo : Paubry - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1690
Initial construction
1842
Change of ownership
1940-1945
Damage during the war
1962
Complete restoration
8 février 1991
Heritage protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs, including existing old structures; former cooler in the park (cad. A 266, 269): registration by order of 8 February 1991

Key figures

Chevalier de Miffant - Naval Army Chief of Wing Commander of the castle around 1690.
Marquise de Walsh-Serrant - Duchess of La Mothe-Houdancourt Owner in 1842.
Jacques Giffard - Owner-restaurant Aceta and restored the castle in 1962.

Origin and history

The Château d'Anglesqueville-les-Murs is a late 17th-century residence built around 1690 by the knight of Miffant, head of the naval armies, on the site of an ancient medieval building. This member of a family of Dieppois shipowners and navigators had this castle built, which then passed by alliance to the Campulley families, then to the Marquis d'Héricy, before being acquired in 1842 by the Marquise of Walsh-Serrant, Duchess of La Mothe-Houdancourt. The building, of sober style, consists of a central low body flanked by two square pavilions, typical of the cozy residences of the time.

The castle, which was damaged during the Second World War by German occupation troops, was then abandoned and purchased in 1962 by Jacques Giffard. The latter undertook a complete restoration of the building, saving this architectural testimony from the Norman heritage. The facades, roofs and an old cooler of the park were protected by an inscription to historic monuments in 1991, thereby recognizing its heritage value.

The castle illustrates the influence of the Dieppois shipowners, whose fortunes were built on maritime commerce and naval activities in the seventeenth century. Its architecture blending sandstone and mud bricks reflects the local materials of the Pays de Caux, while its history reflects the upheavals of the 19th and 20th centuries, between aristocratic heritages, world conflicts and heritage rescues. Today private property not open to the public, there remains a remarkable example of seigneurial residences of this period in Normandy.

External links