Pavillon Flaubert
18 quai Gustave-Flaubert, Dieppedalle-Croisset, 76380 Canteleu
Located on the banks of the Seine, the Pavillon de Croisset is all that remains of the property where Gustave Flaubert lived. During the summer of 1844, the family settled in this building dating from the seventeenth century which was their country house. Gustave Flaubert chose to stay there with his mother and niece, the young Caroline, on the death of his father in 1846\. Here, away from Rouen, he wrote Madame Bovary, Salammbô, L'Éducation sentimentale, Bouvard and Pécuchet… There he received close friends, such as Louis Bouilhet, to whom he read his works. Writers frequented in Paris stayed there, like Maxime Du Camp, the Goncourt brothers, George Sand or Ivan Turgenev. On the death of his mother in 1872, the property reverted to his granddaughter, Caroline, on the express condition that Flaubert could continue to live there. Flaubert died at Croisset on 8 May 1880, while working on Bouvard and Pécuchet. The main house was sold in 1882, before being destroyed.
Tags
Maison des illustres, Maison, appartement, atelier de personnes célèbres, Monument historique
Access
Parking nearby, bike access (bike path).