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Gisors Castle dans l'Eure

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château fort
Eure

Gisors Castle

    Place de Blanmont
    27140 Gisors
Ownership of the municipality
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Château de Gisors
Crédit photo : Baptiste ROUSSEL - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1800
1900
2000
1097
Construction of the castral motte
1123
Reconstruction of the dungeon
1158
Franco-Norman marriage
1193
Taken by Philippe Auguste
1310-1314
Imprisonment of Templars
1862
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle (rests): list of 1862

Key figures

Robert II de Bellême - Norman Lord Constructor of the castral motte in 1097.
Henri Ier d'Angleterre - King of England and Duke of Normandy Strengthen the castle after 1120.
Geoffroy Plantagenêt - Duke of Normandy Died Gisors to Louis VII in 1144.
Philippe Auguste - King of France The castle was occupied in 1193.
Jacques de Molay - Master of the Templars Prisoner at Gisors from 1310 to 1314.
Roger Lhomoy - Castle guard (XX century) Controversial searches on the Templar Treasure.

Origin and history

Gisors Castle is an old castle built between the end of the 11th and 12th centuries, then transformed into a castle. Located in the department of Eure in Normandy, it was built on a castral motte to defend the Duchy of Normandy against the claims of the King of France. The fortress, with a circular dungeon added to a pre-existing structure, was a strategic issue between Normans and Capetians, several times ceded and taken over.

The origins of the castle date back to 1097, when Robert II of Bellême erected a castral motte by order of William II the Roux, king of England and regent of Normandy. A wooden dungeon, probably surrounded by a palisade, was added in 1098. In 1113, the site hosted a meeting between Louis VI the Gros and Henry I of England. The castle experienced its first siege in 1120 during a rebellion of Norman lords, leading Henry I to strengthen its fortifications in 1123, with the addition of an octagonal stone dungeon.

In 1144 Geoffroy Plantagenet, Duke of Normandy, handed over the Norman castle and Vexin to Louis VII the Younger in exchange for his allegiance. The site became an Anglo-Norman bastion after the advent of Henry II Plantagenet in 1154. A meeting in 1158 between Henry II and Louis VII sealed the reconciliation of the two kingdoms by the marriage of the young Henri Plantagenet with Marguerite de France, endowed with the castle. Between 1158 and 1160, the fortress was entrusted to the Templars before returning to the Normans.

Henry II undertook a vast reconstruction campaign between 1170 and 1180, raising the two-storey dungeon and widening the ditches. A new, 800-metre-long, eight-round low enclosure was added to strengthen the defence. In 1188, an interview between Henri II and Philippe Auguste sealed a truce there before the third crusade. When Henry died in 1189, Auguste took advantage of the imprisonment of Richard Cœur de Lion to seize the castle in 1193, adding a second cylindrical dungeon, the " Tower of the Prisoner", inspired by the Louvre.

The Treaty of Gaillon in 1196 put Gisors definitively under French authority. The castle, losing its strategic role, was transformed into a prison and welcomed from 1310 to 1314 Jacques de Molay, Grand Master of the Templars, as well as three other dignitaries of the order. Conquered by the English in 1419, it was only taken over by France in 1449. Delayed after the end of the Franco-English conflicts, he was declassified in 1591.

Gisors Castle is also known for legends related to the Templar treasure. In the 1950s, unauthorised searches by guard Roger Lhomoy, claiming to have discovered underground rooms and safes, destabilized the foundations. No tangible evidence was ever found, but these rumours helped to popularize the myth of hidden treasure. Ranked a historic monument in 1862, the site has been restored since 2021 and is open to the public.

External links