Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte
(canton of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte, Manche)
Castle
In
the siege of the Cotentin Vicomté in the 11th century
Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte was given to the Néel family, founders of the
Benedictine abbey of Saint-Sauveur in 1067.
Néel II, for having taken part in 1047 in the plot of the western Norman barons
against the young Duke William, which culminated in their defeat at
Val-ès-Dunes, lost his vicomté, and was punished with seven years in exile,
before being restored to his assets but not to his position.
In the 12th century Saint-Sauveur passed to the Taisson family and
subsequently to the Harcourt family. One of the younger sons of the family,
Godefroy, was their heir at the start of the Hundred Years War in which he took
an active part... on the English side. On his death he left his barony to Edward
III of England who appointed one of his best captains, John Chandos as its
trustee.
The earth and wooden castle of the Néel family was replaced in the 12th
century by the large square keep supported by flat buttresses, which rises in
the south east corner over the Douve valley. In the 13th century on
the south-west a large bastion called the Batterie, or also the Vieux Donjon [old
keep], which seems to indicate that the Romanesque keep had largely been
dismantled.
In the 14th century the curtain walls, châtelets and flanking towers
on the lower and upper courtyards were re-worked and reinforced by Godefroy
d'Harcourt and John Chandos. The keep was also partly rebuilt, and topped by
machicolations and crenelations. It was in the 16th century that on
its upper platform a small house of doubtful aesthetic value was built which
tops the building rather unexpectedly.
Bernard Beck
Bibliography
- Beck, Bernard . - Châteaux forts de
Normandie, Editions Ouest-France, 1986
- Decaens, Joseph. " Le château de Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte ", in L'Architecture
normande au Moyen-Age, T. 2, éditions Charles Corlet, Presses
Universitaires de Caen, 1997