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Farm of Coulonches and Cours-Montreuil au Renouard au Renouard dans l'Orne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine rural
Ferme
Orne

Farm of Coulonches and Cours-Montreuil au Renouard

    Ferme Coulonches
    61120 Le Renouard
Ferme de Coulonches et des Cours-Montreuil au Renouard
Ferme de Coulonches et des Cours-Montreuil au Renouard
Crédit photo : MRE78 - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
4e quart XVe siècle
Construction of the house
Début XVIe siècle
Home expansion
1er quart XVIIe siècle
Interior and Solif decors
15 décembre 2003
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The whole house; the facades and roofs of all buildings (cf. G 83): inscription by decree of 15 December 2003

Key figures

Guillaume de la Haye - Lord of Coulonches Linked to the coat of arms painted around 1600.

Origin and history

The farm of Coulonches and Cours-Montreuil, classified as a Historical Monument, consists of a logis made of wood with tiles, a horse stable, and other brick buildings. Organized around a closed courtyard, it illustrates Norman rural architecture between the late 15th and early 17th centuries. The house, dating from the end of the 15th century, was enlarged in the 16th century, then enriched with solitary decorations in the 17th century. A distribution corridor was added in the 18th century to serve the rooms.

The site is mentioned as a manor (or "castle") on the map of Cassini, and its almost closed courtyard plan, visible on the cadastre of 1827, was preserved despite the reconstruction of most agricultural buildings in the nineteenth century. The house has a typical moulded corbellation of the late 15th or early 16th century. A room on the ground floor preserves painted decorations from the early seventeenth century, including cartridges, cut leathers, a monogram "VI", and a heart pierced with arrows on two intertwined palm trees, perhaps evoking the coat of arms of William of the Hague, lord of Coulonches at that time.

The protected elements include the whole house, as well as the facades and roofs of all the buildings, registered by order of 15 December 2003. The farm thus embodies the architectural and social evolution of a Norman seigneurial estate, marked by successive transformations between the Middle Ages and the modern era.

External links