Manor Fortification 1186 (≈ 1186)
Richard de Vals reinforces the site.
Fin XVIe - Début XVIIe siècle
Postwar reconstruction
Postwar reconstruction Fin XVIe - Début XVIIe siècle (≈ 1725)
Restoration by the Boudevilles.
1792
Sale as a national good
Sale as a national good 1792 (≈ 1792)
Processing into a farm.
XVIIIe siècle
Add house and park
Add house and park XVIIIe siècle (≈ 1850)
Modernisation for Mainneville.
1996
Farm closure
Farm closure 1996 (≈ 1996)
Start of site degradation.
2024-2025
Restoration and Heritage Lotto
Restoration and Heritage Lotto 2024-2025 (≈ 2025)
Convention with the Heritage Foundation.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The manor house in its entirety (all the building and the floors with the remains known or to be discovered), including the plate ground of the old gardens with hydraulic devices (see AO 6, 7, 10-12, 283): inscription by decree of 26 December 2001
Key figures
Richard de Vals - Knight of the King of France
Fortify the mansion in 1186.
Famille Boudeville - Post-Ligue Owners
Reconstructs the domain at the end of XVIe.
Famille Mainneville - Owners in the 18th century
Add house and park.
Origin and history
The farm of Vaux is a former mansion located in Gisors, Eure, Normandy. Mentioned from the 12th century as a fief and parish, it was then a strategic point on the defence line of the Epte, border between the French royal domain and the Duchy of Normandy. In 1186 Richard de Vals, knight of the king of France, had his mansion strengthened and built the chapel of St. Lawrence, under the authority of the archbishop of Rouen. This site, marked by conflicts, suffers especially during the Hundred Years' War and the looting of the League.
The estate, owned by the Boudevilles, was rebuilt in the late 16th or early 17th century. In the 18th century, the Mainneville family added a new house and a park, thus modernising the whole. Sold as a national property around 1792, the mansion became a farm in the 19th century, with major changes in dependencies in the 19th and 20th centuries. Agricultural activity ceased in 1996, and after a period of degradation, the site was purchased in 2018. An agreement with the Fondation du Patrimoine in 2024 and its selection at the Lotto du Patrimoine in 2025 marked the beginning of its restoration, notably for the chapel Saint-Laurent.
The manor consists of a set of buildings organised around a closed courtyard, punctuated with round pepper roof towers. The chapel, transformed into a barn, the house and the 17th century outbuildings rest on a preserved enclosure. The hydraulic system and traces of the park remain, testifying to its aristocratic past. Together, including archaeological remains and old gardens, has been listed as historical monuments since 26 December 2001.
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