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Saucery Manor à La Haute-Chapelle dans l'Orne

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Orne

Saucery Manor

    La Saucerie
    61700 Domfront en Poiraie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Manoir de la Saucerie
Crédit photo : Ikmo-ned - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1198
Land donation by Alienor d'Aquitaine
XIVe siècle
Transition to the family of Villaines
XVe–XVIe siècles
Construction of the castle by the Doynel
Fin XVIe siècle
Transformation into Renaissance mansion
1860
Fire of the seigneurial house
1955
Historical monument classification
2021
Assignment by the Doynel family
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Manoir de la Sausserie : classification by order of 29 August 1955

Key figures

Aliénor d'Aquitaine - Duchess and Queen Give the land to Robert the Saucier in 1198.
Robert le Saucier - Bailli de Domfront First lord of the estate, vassal of Alienor.
Jacques Doynel - Lord of the mansion Turns the house into a Renaissance mansion.
Élyette Saint-Léger - Last descendant Deanel Gives up the mansion in 2021.

Origin and history

The Saucerie Manor House, located in Domfront in Poraire in Orne, is a vestige of a fortified complex dating from the 14th and 17th centuries. Originally, it belonged to Robert the Saucier, bailiff of Domfront and master of the Duchess Hotel Alienor of Aquitaine, who received the land in 1198. A first seigneurial house was built on a fossilized motte, giving its name to the estate. This site, strategic in the former Duchy of Normandy, evolved over the centuries under the influence of noble families such as the Villaines and the Deanels.

In the 15th century, the Doynel family transformed the estate into a powerful castle, with a seigneurial house, a farm body and a monumental entrance castle into Armomeric sandstone. The latter, flanked by round towers, had typical defensive elements (mâchicoulis, murderers, drawbridge) and was partially rebuilt in the 17th century in a Norman half-timbered style, with overturned boat frame roofs. The house, rebuilt in the Renaissance, was destroyed by fire in 1860.

At the Revolution, the mansion was sold as a national property and partially dismantled. Bought in the 19th century by the descendants of the Deanel, it was classified as a historical monument in 1955 for its entrance castle, the only vestige of the 15th to 16th centuries. Today, it bears witness to medieval defensive architecture and Renaissance transformations, with its moats, wooden scalds and its imperial dome. The sculpted coat of arms above the door and the traces of the old drawbridge recall its seigneurial past.

The poterne, probably dating back to the 14th century, was originally crowned with machicoulis and crenelages, before being raised in the 17th century by structural and brick constructions. The site, bordered by the Grenna, illustrates the evolution of fortification techniques and the adaptation of Norman manors to successive periods, mixing medieval stone and Renaissance half-timbers.

In 2021, the mansion was ceded by Élyette Saint-Léger, descendant of the Doynel family, marking the end of a line linked to this heritage for more than eight centuries. Its history reflects the political and architectural upheavals of Normandy, from feudality to revolution, to the aesthetic transformations of the Renaissance.

External links