Dating revised by INRAP Xe - début XIe siècle (≈ 1104)
Origin possible according to archaeological studies (2015)
Fin XIIe - XIIIe siècle
Assigned traditional construction
Assigned traditional construction Fin XIIe - XIIIe siècle (≈ 1395)
Initial Dating according to Merimée
17 octobre 1828
Fusion with Villers-Canivet
Fusion with Villers-Canivet 17 octobre 1828 (≈ 1828)
Administrative disappearance of Torp
26 juin 2002
Purchase by the municipality
Purchase by the municipality 26 juin 2002 (≈ 2002)
Purchase for 1 €
17 juin 2003
Registration for historical monuments
Registration for historical monuments 17 juin 2003 (≈ 2003)
Official protection of ruins
2016
First tranche of restoration
First tranche of restoration 2016 (≈ 2016)
Dewatering work (€160 000)
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The chapel (Box AC 84) and the ground of the plot AC 83: inscription by order of 17 June 2003
Key figures
Famille de Torp - Religious Benefactors
Grant of property to Saint-Évrolt (XI century)
Famille Morel (ou de Morell) - Local Lords
Owns the seigneury (XVI century)
Origin and history
The Torp Chapel, located in Villers-Canivet in Calvados, is a religious building whose origin dates back to the 12th and 13th centuries according to traditional sources. However, recent archaeological studies (INRAP, 2015) suggest an older dating period between the 10th and early 11th centuries, with work continuing until the 13th century. It was originally the parish church of the village of Torp, now extinct, before its merger with Villers-Canivet in 1828. The building, dedicated to the Virgin, presents a Romanesque choir adorned with modillons and an ogival Gothic nave, reflecting its multiple phases of construction and redesign until the 18th century.
The chapel was critical in the early 2000s, threatened with ruin. Acquired for €1 by the municipality in 2002 after a peril order, it benefited from an associative mobilisation and an inscription in historical monuments in 2003. A first tranche of restoration (2016), estimated at around €160 000, made it possible to secure masonry, framework and cover. The visible burials of the Morel family, local lords in the 16th century, recall its historic anchor, as well as its possible role as priory.
The origins of the chapel are related to the family of Torp, benefactor of the Abbey of Saint-Évroult in the 11th century. The site, marked by successive transformations, illustrates the architectural and religious evolution of medieval Normandy. The Morel family, who owned the seigneury in the 16th century, left tangible traces there, while recent excavations revealed a complex stratigraphy, reflecting a continuous occupation over almost a millennium. Today restored, the chapel embodies both a material heritage and a local collective memory.
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