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Notre-Dame-de-l'Assumption Church of Tamerville dans la Manche

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise
Eglise romane
Manche

Notre-Dame-de-l'Assumption Church of Tamerville

    16-22 Route de l'Église
    50700 Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Église Notre-Dame-de-lAssomption de Tamerville
Crédit photo : Xfigpower - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
Vers 1070
Start of current construction
XIIIe siècle
Addition of the chapel Saint-Jacques
XVe siècle
Choir changes
XVIIe siècle
Change in nave
1755
Installation of the portal
1906
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Church: Order of 19 May 1906

Key figures

Geoffroy de Montbray - Bishop of Coutances (XI century) Period of initial construction of the church.
Jacques d’Anneville - Lord of Ciphervast (15th century) Sponsor of the chapel Saint-Jacques.
Guillaume d’Anneville - Lord of Ciphervast (XVIth century) Marguerite Aubert's husband, heart down.
Michel Gigon - Painter (XX century) Author of glassboards (1982).

Origin and history

The Church of Our Lady of the Assumption of Tamerville, built from the 11th century on the initiative of a lord of Ciphervast, replaces an early chapel that had disappeared. Its construction, interrupted by Norman invasions in the 9th century, resumed around 1070 with workers brought back from England. The octagonal bell tower, typical of the 12th century, and the Romanesque nave, redesigned in the 17th and 18th centuries, bear witness to this turbulent history.

In the 13th century, a lateral chapel dedicated to St.James was added to the left of the choir by Jacques d'Anneville, lord of Ciphervast, as a funeral chapel. The 15th century saw major changes, including the ogival vaulting of the choir and its flat bedside. The Romanesque modillons, the blocked windows of the nave, and the remains of the south door decorated with billets recall the medieval origin of the building.

Ranked a historic monument in 1906, the church houses remarkable furniture: a 15th century Pietà, 18th century painted altarpieces, and 15th and 16th century murals. Modern works, such as the addition of glass windows in 1982 after the cartons of Michel Gigon, or the restoration of the nave in 1972, perpetuate its evolution. A relic of Saint Sulpice, shared with Fresville, strengthens his local spiritual anchor.

The bell tower, on a square base, is distinguished by its octagonal two-storey tower, decorated with blind windows and crenellated frets. Built of limestone probably from the quarries of Yvetot-Bocage, this structure illustrates Norman Romanesque art. The nave, extended by two lateral chapels in 1855, preserves traces of its transformations, such as the modillon cornices and the sculpted triumphal arch of a deer hunting scene.

The church is also marked by baroque additions, such as the portal of 1755 surmounted by a statue of Saint Mayeul, or the lateral altars of the eighteenth century trompe-l'oeil. Its history reflects the architectural and religious evolutions of Normandy, from Viking invasions to modern times, through the wars of Religion and post-medieval reconstructions.

External links