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Manoir du Bois-Doublet à Saint-Célerin dans la Sarthe

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Sarthe

Manoir du Bois-Doublet

    Bois-Doublé
    72110 Saint-Célerin

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1629-1634
Production of painted decorations
1902-1903
Neo-Renaissance Transformation
4 décembre 1996
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades and roofs; following rooms with 17th century painted decorations: on the ground floor: dining room with its camaïeu decors, room of the Battles; on the first floor: room above the dining room known as the "Jugement de Salomon", room above the room of the Battles known as the "Chaste Suzanne", chapel; Failed in full (cf. A 496): by order of 4 December 1996

Key figures

Adam Lorlieu - Amienese painter Author of painted decorations (1629-1634).
Baron Laret d'Aubigny - Owner and patron Transforms the mansion in 1902-1903.

Origin and history

The manor house of Bois-Doublet, located in Saint-Célerin in the Sarthe (Pays de la Loire), dates from the first half of the 17th century. This historic monument is distinguished by its facades and roofs, as well as by rooms decorated with painted decorations made between 1629 and 1634 by the Amienese painter Adam Lorlieu. These frescoes, preserved in rooms such as the dining room, the Battle Hall or the chapel, testify to the pictorial art of the time.

In 1902-1903 Baron Laret d'Aubigny undertook a major transformation of the mansion, reinterpreting it in a neo-Renaissance style. This architectural redesign contrasts with the original elements of the 17th century, while preserving the painted decorations. The manor house, now privately owned, also includes a protected leak (pigeon tree), illustrating the heritage importance of the whole.

Ranked Historic Monument by order of 4 December 1996, the Manoir du Bois-Doublet specifically protects its facades, roofs, and decorated rooms. These protections highlight the artistic value of Adam Lorlieu's paintings, as well as the architectural interest of the site, marked by its stylistic evolutions over the centuries.

External links