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Lormarin Manor à Nocé dans l'Orne

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Orne

Lormarin Manor

    2 Rue de l'Ormarin
    61340 Perche en Nocé
Manoir de Lormarin
Manoir de Lormarin
Manoir de Lormarin
Crédit photo : Gregofhuest - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1565
Construction of the mansion
1668
Acquisition by Turpin
1675
Wedding of Pierre Philippe Turpin
1687
Conversion to Catholicism
10 décembre 1926
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Manoir de Lormarin : inscription by order of 10 December 1926

Key figures

Pierre Philippe Turpin - Lord of Lormarin, squire of the king Owner in 1668, married to Marie de Hallot.
Marie de Hallot - Wife of Pierre Philippe Turpin Marriage in 1675 at the mansion.
Pierre de Leuze - Bourgeois de Nocé, ancestor of artists At the service of the Turpin, the origin of a dynasty of painters.

Origin and history

The manor house of Lormarin is a 15th to 16th century residence located on the former commune of Nocé, now integrated in Perche en Nocé, in the department of Orne (Normandy). Built around 1565 halfway through a valley, it is distinguished by its rectangular house flanked by two cylindrical towers and a circular turret housing a staircase. Its walls, pierced by murderous-arquebusières, testify to its defensive architecture.

In 1668, the mansion became the property of the Turpin family, notably Pierre Philippe Turpin, squire and gentleman of the king's veneration, which acquired it that year. Married to Marie de Hallot in 1675, this Protestant converted to Catholicism in 1687 employed Pierre de Leuze, a bourgeois of Nocé, ancestor of a line of Parisian painters. The estate now includes an antiques workshop and a cottage, while its restored 17th century supply, recalls its past.

The manor house is listed for historical monuments by order of 10 December 1926. Its architecture combines defensive elements (archeries, towers) and residential elements (windows, gables), reflecting the transitions between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The communes now house commercial activities, perpetuating its local anchor.

The Turpin family, linked to the royal court, marks the history of the place. Pierre de Leuze, bourgeois and ancestor of painters Pierre Hyacinthe Deleuse and Jean-Charles Nicaise Perrin, illustrates the social and artistic networks of the period. These links between nobility, bourgeoisie and artisans shed light on the role of the mansion as a crossroads of influences.

The protection of the mansion in 1926 emphasized its heritage value. Its location near the village of Nocé, in a wooded valley, and its contemporary developments (gite, workshop) make it a historical and living site, witness to the architectural and social evolutions of Normandy.

External links