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Castle of Grivesnes dans la Somme

Somme

Castle of Grivesnes

    11 Rue de l'Église
    80250 Grivesnes
Markus3 (Marc ROUSSEL)

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1472
Destruction of the medieval mansion
1611-1640
Construction of housing
1793-1794
Sale as a national good
1918
Destruction during the Great War
1965
Final sale of the domain
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Louis de Goussencourt (15??-1640) - Lord of Grivesnes and builder Fits build the main house body in the seventeenth.
Roch Théry - Inhabitant and partial savior Racheta land in 1793 to restore it.
Louis-Henri de Goussencourt (1766-1849) - Last emigrant count Owner before revolutionary confiscation.
François Matoret et Françoise Louchet - Emigrants to Quebec Grivesnes left after the destruction of 1636.
Vicomte Louis de Beaurepaire de Louvagny - Last noble owner Sells the estate after 1918.

Origin and history

The castle of Grivesnes found its origins in a seigneurial mansion of the 15th century, destroyed during the Burgundian raids after the siege of Beauvais in 1472. This first building, probably linked to the Jacquerie of 1358 born in the neighbouring village of Villers-Tournelle, was owned by local noble families, whose written traces are missing for this medieval period.

Between 1611 and 1640 Louis de Goussencourt, son of Robert and husband of Catherine Le Sellier, had the main house of the present castle erected. The estate, enlarged in the 18th century, belonged at the end of the Ancien Régime to its descendant, Count Louis de Goussencourt. During the Revolution, the castle was confiscated as a national property in 1793-1794, before Roch Théry, a local resident, bought a part of it back to the original family.

During the First World War, the castle and its 19-hectare park suffered massive destruction in 1918 during the German Spring offensive. The fighting, particularly violent around Grivesnes, reduced the village to ruins and damaged the castle to two thirds. After the war, the last owner, Viscount Louis de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, sold the estate in 1899 to an Amienese notary. Today, only the farm body persists and two outbuildings, witnesses to this missing heritage.

The site was also marked by its strategic role during the war: a French military airfield was installed there in 1916, and the surrounding quarries served as a battlefield to the Armistice. A commemorative stele, erected in 1970, honours French and German soldiers who fell during the clashes. The castle, symbol of local resistance, thus embodies both the picard seigneurial history and the ravages of modern conflicts.

Prior to its destruction, the estate included an industrial distillery and a 132 hectare farm, illustrating its dual economic and residential role. The archives also mention the emigration of local families to Quebec after the destruction of 1636, such as François Matoret and Françoise Louchet, or nobles such as Catherine de Belleau. These transatlantic links recall the impact of regional crises on population displacement.

Architecturally, Grivesnes Castle was typical of post-medieval reconstructions, with a central house body and outbuildings organized around a park. Its position on a hill overlooking the village made it a strategic point, both for feudal control and for the battles of the 20th century. The present, though fragmentary, remains offer an overview of this turbulent history, between picard nobility, peasant revolts and world wars.

External links