Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Château de Saint-Sauveur à Sainte-Honorine-la-Chardonne dans l'Orne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château
Orne

Château de Saint-Sauveur

    100 La Chapelle Saint-Sauveur
    61430 Sainte-Honorine-la-Chardonne
Crédit photo : L. Lacoste - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1650
Reconstruction of the castle
29 décembre 1978
Partial classification
11 septembre 2009
Supplementary registration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades and roofs as well as the terrace and the two bridges on the moat with their balusters (cad. D 126, 127): classification by order of 29 December 1978 - The painted decor of the large living room of the house; the base of the garden with the built elements (bassin, walls, gate) and the forecourt; water moats with the elements of the hydraulic system (cad. 125, placed le Haut Rocher, 126, 128, placed Saint-Sauveur, 127, placed Les doves de Saint-Sauveur): inscription by order of 11 September 2009

Key figures

Jacob de Grésille - Baron de Saint-Sauveur and reconstructor Commander of the castle around 1650.
Madeleine de Mesnage - Mother of Jacob de Grésille Daughter of an ambassador of France.

Origin and history

The Château de Saint-Sauveur, located 2 km east of Sainte-Honorine-la-Chardonne in Orne, is a residence rebuilt around 1650 by Jacob de Grésille, Baron of Saint-Sauveur. The building, built on a full ground surrounded by large moats, retains its original distribution around a central stone staircase. Its facades, roofs, bastioned terraces and balustered bridges have been classified as historic monuments since 1978, while its interior decoration and hydraulic system have been protected since 2009.

Jacob de Grésille, whose mother Madeleine de Mesnage was granddaughter of the French ambassador to Charles Quint, obtained the right to bear the name of Saint-Sauveur and had his land erected as a baronie. The castle, built of granite, is distinguished by its symmetrical plan flanked by two pavilions and its foreyard framed with water moat. Inside, some woodwork on the first floor and a decor painted in the large living room testify to its original fascist.

The estate is organized around a structured garden, including a pond, walls and a portal, all of which is listed as historical monuments. Although private property, the castle illustrates Norman aristocratic architecture of the seventeenth century, mixing defensive influences (doves, terraces) and residential. Its hydraulic system, still functional, highlights the technical ingenuity of the time.

The successive protections (1978 and 2009) cover both external elements (balustrades, bridges) as well as landscape developments and interior remains. The site, marked by its Protestant history (linked to the United Church of the Norman Bocage), remains a remarkable example of the adaptation of medieval castles to the classic cannons of the Great Century.

External links