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Manor of Vitanval à Sainte-Adresse en Seine-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Seine-Maritime

Manor of Vitanval

    3 Rue de la Solitude
    76310 Sainte-Adresse
Crédit photo : GuyMoussel - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
XIIIe siècle
First mention of the field
1398
English occupation
1419–1450
Construction of the current mansion
1563
Stay of Charles IX
1785
Construction of the Solitude Pavilion
1920
Restoration and addition of a tower
27 janvier 1986
Registration for Historic Monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Old parts of the manor house (except modern additions: turret to the south and wing to the north) (Box AC 162): inscription by order of 27 January 1986

Key figures

Jean de Wychefort - Chief of the English garrison Suspected owner of the mansion.
Charles IX - King of France Stayed at the mansion in 1563.
Catherine de Médicis - Queen Mother and Regent Accompanied Charles IX in 1563.
Paul-Michel Thibault - Architect Designed the Pavilion of Solitude.

Origin and history

The mansion of Vitanval, located in Sainte-Adresse in Normandy, has its origins in the Middle Ages. The estate, mentioned from the thirteenth century, belonged to the Black Pel family before being occupied by the English in 1398 during the Hundred Years War. The latter set up a garrison and built a castle, now extinct, of which only archaeological traces remain: a feudal motte, a drawbridge and ditches in quarter circle, still visible in the 19th century. The estate, abandoned after the war, was partially demolished in the 18th century.

The current mansion was built between 1419 and 1450, probably under the impulse of Jean de Wychefort, head of the English garrison. This modest building, with wooden panels, is distinguished by a monumental fireplace of the 15th to 16th centuries and beams decorated with lily flowers. In 1563, during the Wars of Religion, King Charles IX and his mother Catherine de Médicis stopped there during the siege of Le Havre. An epidemic forced the king to stay there, while the queen visited the troops. The figure "1563", engraved on a gable, commemorates this event.

In the 18th century, the estate enriched with a Pavillon de la Solitude, a garden factory designed in 1785 by architect Paul-Michel Thibault. In 1920, the Toussaint family, then owner, added an octagonal tower and restored the mansion. Old parts, excluding modern additions, were listed as historical monuments in 1986. Today, the mansion bears witness to both Norman seigneurial architecture and the landscape transformations of the Enlightenment.

External links