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Castle dans la Manche

Manche

Castle

    12 Route de l'Argonce
    50600 Grandparigny

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1602
Murder of Gilles de Saint-Germain
1790
Cache du curé de Chèvreville
1812
Jean-François-Toussaint de Lorgeril Counsellor General
1815
Deputy of the English Channel
1952
Change of ownership
26 avril 1976
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs; staircase with wooden baluster ramp; living room, billiard room on the ground floor with their decor; Columbus (Case B 424): inscription by order of 26 April 1976

Key figures

Gilles de Saint-Germain - Lord of Parigny Killed in 1602 by his cousins.
Jean-François-Toussaint de Lorgeril - Lord of Parigny, Rear Admiral Escaped from the Revolution, General Counselor.
Édouard de Lorgeril - Son of Jean-François-Toussaint Fit build the château de Chèvreville.

Origin and history

The Château de Parigny is an emblematic residence located on the former town of Parigny, now integrated in Grandparigny in the Manche department in Normandy. Built between the 15th and 19th centuries, it combines various architectural elements, reflecting the stylistic evolutions of these periods. Its facades, roofs, as well as some interiors such as the lounge and billiard room, have been protected as historical monuments since 1976.

The history of the castle is marked by tragic events and notable figures. In 1602, Gilles de Saint-Germain, seigneur of Parigny, was murdered on the parron of his castle by his Huguenot cousins, the Saint-Germain de La Bazoge, in the context of the Wars of Religion. Later, in the 18th century, Jean-François-Toussaint de Lorgeril, seigneur of the place, became admiral after the American War of Independence. Escaped from guillotine during the Revolution, he became general councillor in 1812 and deputy of the English Channel in 1815. His son, Édouard de Lorgeril, built the château de Chèvreville in the 19th century.

The Château de Parigny remained in the family of Lorgeril until 1952, when he passed to the Fauchon de Villeplee family. Among the remarkable elements of the estate are a dovecote inscribed with historical monuments, as well as a wooden staircase with a baluster ramp. The site, located near the church of Notre-Dame de Parigny, today embodies both architectural and memorial heritage, linked to local and regional history.

The protection of the castle, formalized in 1976, covers not only its facades and roofs, but also interior spaces such as the living room and billiard room, thus preserving their original decor. These elements, associated with its dovecote, illustrate the historical and cultural importance of the place, while offering a testimony of the ways of life of Norman elites throughout the centuries.

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