Château-Gaillard

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For the commune in the Ain département, see Château-Gaillard, Ain.
Château-Gaillard
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Château-Gaillard

Château-Gaillard is a ruined medieval castle, located above the town of Les Andelys, in the Eure département of Normandy, France. It is located some 95 km north-west of Paris and 40 km from Rouen.

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[edit] History

Richard I of England, simultaneously feudal Duke of Normandy, ordered that the castle be built in little more than 12 months, between 1197 and 1198. The goal was to protect Rouen and Richard's duchy of Normandy from the French kings, but Richard died due to an infected arrow wound on his shoulder before the fortress was complete.

Donjon
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Donjon

The construction of Château Gaillard was taken over by his brother John. The building of the castle continued but for two alterations at John's request. One was to have an extra window built on the chapel's outer wall and the other was to have an extra toilet in the chapel.

The troops of Philip II of France captured it after a long siege in 1203, some 4 years after Richard's death due to one fault in the fortress. During the siege, Philip ordered a group of his men to look for a weak point in the castle. After an extensive examination, they located the disposal chute for the toilet which John requested. They climbed up it and ended up in the chapel, which was locked from the outside, so they broke a window and climbed along the castle wall. After ambushing several unsuspecting guards, Philip's men then brought down the drawbridge and allowed the sum of their army into the castle. John and Richard's supporters and troops, unprepared for such an encounter, were massacred in the surprise attack.

Having lost any strategic value, Château-Gaillard was dismantled 400 years later under Henry IV of France.

[edit] Miscellaneous

It is said that Philip II boasted that his troops would take the château "were the walls made of iron"; Richard the Lionheart retorted that his troops would hold the château "were the walls made of butter".

The castle was used as a setting for the computer game The Journeyman Project 2: Buried in Time.

Château-Gaillard aux Andelys
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Château-Gaillard aux Andelys

[edit] See also

List of castles in France

[edit] External links