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Château d'Esquay-sur-Seulles dans le Calvados

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Calvados

Château d'Esquay-sur-Seulles

    Route de Bayeux
    14400 Esquay-sur-Seulles
Château dEsquay-sur-Seulles
Château dEsquay-sur-Seulles
Château dEsquay-sur-Seulles
Château dEsquay-sur-Seulles
Château dEsquay-sur-Seulles
Château dEsquay-sur-Seulles
Château dEsquay-sur-Seulles
Crédit photo : Pimprenel - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1626
Wedding of Pierre de Pierrepont
Début XVIIe siècle
Construction of the castle
XIXe siècle
Restoration by Dauger
2 juillet 1927
Registration Historic Monument
Années 1980
Restoration of the tripartite roof
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle: inscription by order of 2 July 1927

Key figures

Pierre de Pierrepont - Lord of Esquay and sponsor Have the castle built in the seventeenth.
Jeanne de la Servaisière - Wife of Pierre de Pierrepont Initials painted in a room.
Baron Gustave Dauger - Owner-restaurant in the 19th century Modified roof and garden around 1861.
Arcisse de Caumont - Historian and archaeologist Qualifies the castle as better preserved.

Origin and history

The castle of Esquay-sur-Seulles, located in Calvados in Normandy, is built in the seventeenth century for Pierre de Pierrepont, local lord. This monument illustrates the architecture of its time, with an ordered facade, defensive elements such as mâchicoulis and murderers, as well as a richly decorated interior. It has been listed as a Historic Monument since 1927, highlighting its heritage value.

The castle combines military features (fossed, scauguettes) and residential features, with a stone and stone house, a large vaulted staircase, and interior decorations from the 17th and 18th centuries. Transformed in the 19th century by Baron Gustave Dauger, it loses its roof in original keg but retains elements such as the campanile and the garden pavilions. Its history reflects the architectural and social evolutions of Normandy.

Ranked among the best preserved castles of Calvados according to Arcisse de Caumont, it also bears witness to family alliances, such as the marriage of Pierre de Pierrepont and Jeanne de la Servaisière in 1626, whose initials adorn a hall. The successive modifications (sleeping bridge, landscaped garden) show its adaptation to the tastes and needs of later times.

External links