Château de Robert le Diable

Château de Robert le Diable
Moulineaux, France

The ruins are in the very near of the motorway A13 from Rouen to Caen. It dominates the landscape.

View of Château de Robert le Diable
Château de Robert le Diable
Coordinates 49°20′23″N 0°57′35″E / 49.3396°N 0.9597°E / 49.3396; 0.9597
Type Concentric castle
Site information
Condition Ruins
Site history
Built c.
Materials Limestone
Garrison information
Occupants Normandy Duchy of Normandy

The Château de Robert le Diable is a French feudal castle from the time of the Dukes of Normandy. It is more properly, though less commonly, known as the Château de Moulineaux. It is situated at Moulineaux, near Rouen, in the département of Seine-Maritime at the side of the A13 autoroute.

It takes its name from Robert the Devil who, according to some, was Robert de Montgommery, also known as Robert le Magnifique ('the magnificent'), Duke of Normandy and father of William the Conqueror. However, there is no evidence that this person was involved in the construction.

An alternative view states that the castle was owned and guarded by the de Moulins, later the Molyneux family who were loyalists of William the Conqueror, and it was rebuilt in 1378 by a descendant from William de Molineux, the Lord of Sefton, in Lancashire, one of the followers of William the Conqueror.[1]

The castle was built during the 11th and 12th centuries. It stands on a hill which dominates the River Seine, the view extending over the whole Rouen region, making it a particularly strategic location.

It is known that the English King Richard I ('Lionheart') stayed here. His brother, King John ('Lackland') destroyed the castle during his struggle with the King of France Philip II Augustus. The latter rebuilt it. During the Hundred Years' War, the people of Rouen destroyed the towers to prevent the castle being used by the English.

Half ruined, it is today furnished with various artefacts as well as reconstructed scenes of local history and life in the Middle Ages.

The castle is privately owned. The site has been classified since 1935 as a monument historique by the French Ministry of Culture.[2]

See also

References

  1. The Norman people and their existing descendants in the British dominions and the United States of America, Henry S. King & Co., 1874
  2. French Ministry of Culture: Château fort Château de Robert le Diable, accessed 29 January 2013
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Coordinates: 49°20′22.5″N 0°57′35″E / 49.339583°N 0.95972°E / 49.339583; 0.95972

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