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Château de Boutemont à Ouilly-le-Vicomte dans le Calvados

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Calvados

Château de Boutemont

    Chemin de Bouttemont
    14100 Ouilly-le-Vicomte
Château de Boutemont
Château de Boutemont
Château de Boutemont
Château de Boutemont
Château de Boutemont
Château de Boutemont
Château de Boutemont
Château de Boutemont
Crédit photo : Edouard Hue (EdouardHue) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIe siècle
Construction of feudal moth
1195
Mention by Guillaume de Boutemont
1529
Acquisition by Philippe Paisant
1540
Annotation by Philippe Paisant
fin XVIIe siècle
Modernisation by Jean-Baptiste Le Bas
1915
Purchase by Charley Drouilly
1927
First registration for Historic Monuments
2020
Transmission to Johanna Winstrom Monnier and Bruno Monnier
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château de Boutemont : inscription by order of 19 January 1927. Court of Honour; dry moat with retaining walls and dormant bridge (cad. B 12, 13): registration by order of 2 October 1995

Key figures

Guillaume de Boutemont - Medieval Lord Mentioned in 1195 in the chessboard.
Philippe Paisant - Owner and reconstructor In 1540, the castle was rebuilt.
Jean-Baptiste Le Bas - Counsellor at the Aid Court Modernizes the castle in the 17th century.
David Guéroult - Last Lord Before the Revolution Emigrated in 1791.
Charley Drouilly - Owner in the 20th century Order the gardens in Achilles Duchêne.
Achille Duchêne - Landscape Create the French gardens.
Johanna Winstrom Monnier et Bruno Monnier - Current owners Open the domain to the public.

Origin and history

The Château de Boutemont found its origins in the 11th century with a feudal motte built by the Boutemont family under Henri II Plantagenet. Guillaume de Boutemont was mentioned there in 1195. The fief, first possession of the Boutemont until the 14th century, then passed to the families Servin, Borel, and then Paisant. In 1529, Philippe Paisant, annoyed in 1540, began the reconstruction of the castle, marking the beginning of his transformation into a Renaissance residence.

In the 17th century, the castle was acquired by the Le Bas, of which Jean-Baptiste Le Bas, adviser to the court of aid of Normandy, modernized the facade, enlarged the house with two wings and a monumental entrance, and destroyed the west wall. In 1745, the property passed through marriage to the Guéroult, who kept it until the Revolution. David Guéroult, the last lord, emigrated in 1791.

In the 20th century, Commodore Charley Drouilly bought the castle in 1915 and entrusted Achille Duchêne with the creation of French-style gardens. In 1976, Armand and Hélène Sarfati restored the park and transmitted it in 2020 to Johanna Winstrom Monnier and Bruno Monnier, who opened the estate to the public, including remarkable gardens, orangery transformed into a restaurant, and three historic rooms accessible by the drawbridge.

The castle, partially listed as historical monuments since 1927, consists of a quadrangular enclosure with dry moat, a tower with two drawbridges, a central stone and half-timbered building, and a 16th century dwelling. Its park, classified as a remarkable garden, combines classic and Italian styles, with box hedges, cut yews and cypresses.

The building illustrates the architectural evolution of medieval fortresses in aristocratic residences, while preserving defensive elements such as moats and turrets. Its history reflects the changes of ownership among Norman noble families, as well as the successive adaptations to the tastes and needs of times, from the Middle Ages to its contemporary opening to the public.

External links