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Château des Huguenots in Dampierre-en-Bray en Seine-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château Médiéval et Renaissance
Seine-Maritime

Château des Huguenots in Dampierre-en-Bray

    Beuvreuil
    76220 Dampierre-en-Bray
Private property
Crédit photo : Phaubry - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1900
2000
1315
Execution of Enguerran III de Marigny
1415
Battle of Azincourt
XIIIe–XIVe siècles
Construction of the castle
2 mai 1921
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Château dit des Huguenots in Beuvreuil : classification by order of 2 May 1921

Key figures

Enguerran III de Marigny - Adviser and treasurer of Philippe le Bel Lord of Marigny, executed in 1315.
Isabeau de Marigny - Inheritance of the seigneury Sends Dampierre to the d-Auxi by marriage.
David de Rambures - Lord of Dampierre Died at Azincourt (1415), married Catherine d'Auxi.
Nicolas Bénard - Fief acquirer Acheta the castle in the 15th century.

Origin and history

The Château des Huguenots, located in the hamlet of Beuvreuil in Dampierre-en-Bray (Seine-Maritime), dates from the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. His name comes from Huguenot seigneurial families who occupied him. Ranked Historic Monument by order of 2 May 1921, it is today a private property inaccessible to the public. This castle illustrates medieval defensive architecture in the country of Bray, a natural region on horseback on the Seine-Maritime and the Oise.

Dampierre-en-Bray, called "Terrace domni Petri" (Terre de Saint Pierre) in ancient texts, was structured around the parishes of Dampierre and Beuvreuil. In the Middle Ages, the territory was divided between the seigneuries of Dampierre, Rambures and Marigny. The castle of Beuvreuil, linked to the seigneury of Marigny, was transmitted by successive alliances to the families Le Portier, d'Auxi, and then Rambures. Enguerran III de Marigny, treasurer of Philip the Bel, was hanged in 1315, marking a turning point in local history.

The seigneury of Dampierre then passed into the hands of the Rambures and was sold to Nicolas Bénard in the 15th century. The fief de Marigny, adjacent, was passed on to the families of Fécamp, Gamaches and Roncherolles through strategic marriages. These alliances reflect feudal dynamics in Normandy, where lands and castles changed hands according to lines and conflicts, such as the Battle of Azincourt (1415), where several local lords found death.

The country of Bray, an agricultural and bocager region, was a strategic crossroads between Picardy and Normandy. Castles such as the Huguenots served both as seigneurial residences and as checkpoints on commercial roads, such as the D16 and the D84 which still cross Dampierre-en-Bray. The Epte, a historic border river between Normandy and Île-de-France, reinforced the geopolitical importance of the area.

In the 20th century, the castle was preserved for its architectural heritage, although its access remains restricted. Its ranking in 1921 underscores its historical value, linked to religious conflicts (hence its name) and feudal transformations. The nearby churches, such as Saint-Pierre de Beuvreuil (XI–XVIth centuries), complement this heritage landscape marked by medieval heritage and territorial recompositions.

External links