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Château de Gacé dans l'Orne

Patrimoine classé
Musée
Demeure seigneuriale
Château Médiéval et Renaissance
Orne

Château de Gacé

    454 Place du Château
    61230 Gacé
Ownership of the municipality
Château de Gacé
Château de Gacé
Château de Gacé
Château de Gacé
Château de Gacé
Château de Gacé
Château de Gacé
Château de Gacé
Château de Gacé

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIe siècle
Foundation of the castle
1414
Passage to Estouteville
1417
Taken by the English
1445
Resumed from the English
1449
Return to France
XIVe siècle
Reconstruction during the Hundred Years War
1449-1489
Construction of round towers
XVIe siècle
Addition of the north facade
1789
Sale as a national good
1968
Partial classification for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs (Case D 342): inscription by order of 6 May 1968

Key figures

Sire d'Orval - French knight Freed Gacé from the English in 1449.
Foulque IV Paynel - Lord of Gacé (15th century) Powerful Norman Baron owner of the castle.
Louis d'Estouteville - Husband of Jeanne Paynel Noble families linked to the castle.
Marie Duplessis - Figure associated with the museum Say the lady to the camellias.
Louis Charles Grégoire Maignet - General of the Empire (1768-1848) Local personality born in Gacé.
Charles Auguste de Goyon de Matignon - Marshal of France (1647-1739) Count of Gacé and owner.
Raoul de Gacé - Lord of the castle First known lord, son of Robert the Dane.
Jean II de La Ferté-Fresnel - Rebuilder of the castle Renovation after the Hundred Years War.
Louis II d'Estouteville - Lord by Covenant Husband of Jeanne Paisnel in 1414.
Adrienne d'Estouteville - Heir of the castle Married to Francis I of Saint-Pol.
Anne-Charles-François de Montmorency-Luxembourg - Last owner before the Revolution Emigrated, resulting in the sale of the castle.

Origin and history

The castle of Gacé, located in the Orne in Normandy, is an ancient fortress rebuilt from the fourteenth century. Its strategic role was to protect the Touques Valley, serving as the first bulwark against invasions from the west or south. The fortress, mentioned from the Merovingian period, was thoroughly remodelled during the Hundred Years' War, especially with the construction of the Talbot Tower to the west, dated from that period. Work continued in the 15th and 16th centuries, with the construction of two round towers flanking the entrance (from 1449, then resumed in 1489) and the addition of a north facade in the 16th century. Part of the southwestern facade was modernized in the 17th century to adapt to the tastes of the era.

During the French Revolution, part of the eastern facade was demolished by the inhabitants before being rebuilt in the 19th century with bricks. The castle, partially listed as a historical monument in 1968, now houses the town hall and a museum dedicated to La Dame aux Camelias, in connection with Marie Duplessis, a local figure who inspired Alexandre Dumas Jr. Its architecture mixes stone and red brick, reflecting its successive transformations, from medieval origins to classic design.

The site is marked by major historical events, such as its capture by the English in 1417 during the Hundred Years' War, and its resumption by the French in 1449 thanks to the intervention of the Sire of Orval. In the Middle Ages, it was owned by noble Norman families, including the Merle (XIIIth century), Paynel (XVth century), and then Estouteville by marriage. In the 19th century, it became a local symbol, linked to personalities such as General Maignet or the Count of Matignon, Marshal of France.

The commune of Gacé, crossed by the Touques and situated on the Rouen-Le Mans axis, also preserves traces of its industrial past (dillery, dairy) and its role in modern conflicts, such as the partial destruction of the city centre in June 1940. The castle, with its museum and monument to the dead, remains an active place of memory, bearing witness to the military, social and cultural history of Normandy.

External links