



The castlewalls are undergoing a restoration campaign. For more information, click here
Situated on a rocky spur once surrounded by marshes, between the valleys of the
rivers Ante and Marescot, the castle is set on an ideal natural defensive site
which dominates the city.
Testifying to the power of the Anglo-Norman dukes and kings, this fortress was
entirely erected in the 12th and 13th centuries.
Its two square keeps are rare examples of medieval architecture associating
military function with residential purpose. They are part of the great group
of Anglo-Norman “palace-keeps” built by William the Conqueror and
his successors after the 1066 conquest of England. Modified little during the
centuries which followed its construction, the castle -which had become indefensible
because of the progress of artillery-, was abandoned from the beginning of the
17th century. Threatened to be destroyed and in a state of ruin, it is from
1840, the year when the edifice was listed as a National Heritage building,
that the projects of preservation appear. Ambitious campaigns of restoration
came into being, and it is in 1997, after long years of rehabilitation, that
the keeps open their doors to the public.
Magnificently restored, this place of English and French history, that cannot
be ignored, imposes itself as a major element in the local tourist scene. It
is inscribed, with the monuments of Caen and Bayeux, among the sites of the “William the Conqueror” historical area.
