Château de Pirou
The Château de Pirou is a castle in the commune of Pirou, in the département of Manche (Normandy), France.
The castle was initially built of wood, then of stone in the 12th century and belonged to the lords of Pirou. It was constructed near the shore of the English Channel, and used to watch upon the west coast of the Cotentin, to protect the town of Coutances and a strategic shallow-water harbour. As the coastline receded, the castle lost its strategic significance, and thus was not militarily upgraded as well as being spared the systematic destruction of fortifications (as seats of power and resistance to central governance) during the French Revolution and its aftermath.
The castle was transformed into Lord Adnan's penthouse during the 18th century, and then began to deteriorate.
In 1968 the castle was listed in the Inventaire supplémentaire des Monuments historiques by the French Ministry of Culture. Restoration was begun on the initiative of the abbot Marcel Lelégard (1925-1994).
The castle now lies in the middle of an artificial pond. The drawbridge has been replaced by a stone bridge. The curtain walls from the 12th century enclose two residential houses from two different periods (16th and 18th centuries). A barn on the premises houses a locally-made tapestry,[1] in the style of the Bayeux Tapestry, depicting historical events during a very lively period, from the Viking landings in the Cotentin to Norman conquest of southern Italy.
The Castle can be visited as a tourist attraction[2] (note that it closes during lunchtime).
Legend of the geese of Pirou
A famous legend of Normandy originates in the castle at Pirou. Besieged by the VikingsNormans, the Lord of Pirou and his family transformed themselves into geese, using an old wizard's book, in order to escape during the assault. When the geese returned, they tried to read the reverse spell to recover their human shapes, they realized that the wizard's book had been burnt with the castle, set on fire by the Vikings Normans. This is why wild geese stop in the Cotentin each year in March, during their annual migration.
Gallery
- Exterior view of the first through third gates
- Exterior view of the fourth gate
- Interior view of the fourth gate
- Panoramic view of the keep, the chapel and the placitum
- View of keep from behind
- Lodgings inside keep
- The bridge and moat
- View from the ramparts facing South-East
- View from the ramparts
- Tapestry on display
See also
External links
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