seneschal, in medieval and early modern France, a steward or principal administrator in a royal or noble household. As time went on, the office declined in importance and was often equivalent to that of a bailiff (q.v.); the office and title persisted until the French Revolution.
In Merovingian times the seneschal was subordinate to the major domus, or mayor of the palace, and had charge of the personnel of the royal household. Under the Carolingians he became responsible for organizing the journeys of king or emperor and, by 1071, was the chief officer—steward of the household, head of the army, and administrator of the royal demesne. With the title dapifer he headed the names of those witnessing royal diplomas. By the mid-12th century, however, the office had weakened and become largely honorary.
Most of the great French feudatories—the dukes of Normandy and Aquitaine, the counts of Anjou, Poitiers, and Toulouse—had their seneschals. In Anjou and Poitou the title was given to subordinate officials on those counts’ demesne. When these provinces became united to the crown after 1203, these officials were retained to perform the same duties as the bailiffs of the royal demesne elsewhere. This was the basis of the later classic administrative division of France into bailliages and sénéchaussées, although in Normandy, Maine, Anjou, and Auvergne the seneschals were replaced by bailiffs.