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Manoir de Bel-Air à Brélès dans le Finistère

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Finistère

Manoir de Bel-Air

    100 Bel air
    29810 Brélès
Manoir de Bel-Air
Manoir de Bel-Air
Manoir de Bel-Air
Manoir de Bel-Air
Manoir de Bel-Air
Crédit photo : Louboutinj - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
400
500
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
IVe siècle (légende)
Legendary Castel-Mériadec
1462
First attested building
1585–1599
Construction of the current house
XVIIe siècle
Adding wings in return
1810
Change of ownership
1850 (environ)
Acquisition by Baron Grivel
1893
New owners
1993
Historical monument classification
Années 2000
Major restoration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Manoir, i.e.: house and wings in return, fence walls, gate and floor of the courtyard, dovecote, holds and entrance pillar of the aisle (cad. C 595, 599-602, 608): classification by order of 9 September 1993

Key figures

Conan Meriadec - Legendary First King of Brittany Associated with Castel-Mériadec (IVth century)
Yvon de Kerengar - Medieval Lord Owner in 1462 in Kerengar
François de Kerengar - Home builder Currency engraved in 1599
Baron Grivel - Vice-Admiral and Senator Owner in the 19th century
Victor Hugo - Writer (local liberal) Supposed residence in the 19th century
Henri III - King of France (representation) Face carved on a chimney
Catherine de Médicis - Queen Mother (representation) Face carved on a chimney

Origin and history

The Manor House of Bel-Air, located in Brélès in Finistère, is an ancient fortified house of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. It has kept its original buildings arranged in "U" around a closed courtyard, as well as defensive elements such as two scalables and the remains of a drawbridge. Its strategic location on the north shore of the Aber Ildut, with a wharf and hold giving access to the sea, reflects its historical link with the maritime and commercial activities of the Kerengar family, owners of the premises until 1810.

The construction of the current house ran from 1585 to 1599, under the impulse of François de Kerengar, as evidenced by the motto engraved above the door: "Pray for François de Kerengar who made me do and Bel Air was named 1599". The mansion then passed into the hands of several families, including the Claisrambault in 1810, then Baron Grivel, vice-admiral and senator under the Second Empire, in the mid-19th century. A local legend even evokes a stay of Victor Hugo in Bel-Air. Since the 2000s, significant restoration works (north wing, hold) have preserved this classified heritage.

Inside, the house houses open and painted chimneys, including one decorated with four half-relief faces, probably representing Henry III and Catherine de Medici. The two wings in return for square, added in the seventeenth century, complete this homogeneous ensemble, classified as historical monuments in 1993. The estate also preserves a 17th century round dovecote and a mill in ruins. The architecture combines defensive function (fencing wall, 19th century cannons) and neat decoration, typical of the Breton manor houses of the Renaissance.

Some historians associate the site with the legendary Castel-Mériadec, built according to tradition by Conan Meriadec, the first king of Brittany, in the fourth century. More surely, the mansion replaces an earlier building attested in 1462 in Kerengar, owned by Yvon de Kerengar. This family's fortune was based on maritime commerce, as evidenced by the port facilities still visible today.

The mansion illustrates the evolution of local elites, from medieval lords (Kerengar) to the Empire aristocracy (Grivel), then to the nineteenth-century bourgeoisie (family of Taisne of Raymonval in 1893). Its classification in 1993 protects the whole of the whole: house, wings, fence walls, dovecote, holds and driveway, stressing its heritage importance in Brittany.

External links