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Large Farm of Crepon à Crépon dans le Calvados

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine rural
Manoir
Calvados

Large Farm of Crepon

    Le Bourg
    14480 Crépon
Crédit photo : Pimprenel - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1ère moitié du XVIIe siècle
Construction of the mansion
XVIIe siècle
Farming
1811
Sale by the family La Bédoyère
18 mars 1927
Registration for Historic Monuments
2012
Partial conversion to lodgings
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs: inscription by decree of 18 March 1927

Key figures

Adrien de Novince - Lord of Aubigny and Baron of Crépon Suspected commander of the mansion, who died in 1611.
Marie de Médicis - Queen of France Adrien de Novince was his hotel manager.
Colonel de La Bédoyère - Owner in the early 19th century Sell the Great Farm in 1811.
Xavier Gardinier - Industrial owner in 2010 Former leader of Lanson and Pommery.

Origin and history

The Grand Ferme de Crépon, built in the first half of the seventeenth century, is a manor house located in Bessin, on the commune of Crépon (Calvados). Probably built for Adrien de Novince, seigneur d'Aubigny and Baron de Crépon, maître d'hôtel de Marie de Médicis, this unfinished house reflects an ambitious architectural project never completed. The building, in the style of Louis XIII, is known as a "codentinaise school" and has sills of sill windows, gestuous skylights and imposing chimneys, but retains traces of incompleteness like waiting stones.

Turned into a closed-yard farm since the 17th century, the property changed hands several times, passing from Novince d'Aubigny to the Le Blais families, Costé de Saint-Supplix, then Huchet de la Bédoyère. Sold in 1811 by Colonel de La Bédoyère, it was then used as a farm before being partially converted into lodgings in the 21st century. The facades and roofs, representative of Norman rural architecture, were listed as historical monuments in 1927.

The estate consists of a central limestone house, surrounded by agricultural buildings with discreet openings, including dovecotes under attic. Access is via a double gate, typical of the manor farms of the region. At the back, the house features angle straps, rare defensive elements for a farm. In 2010, the site belonged to the industrial Xavier Gardinier, before being redesigned for tourist use while maintaining its historical character.

The history of the Great Farm illustrates the evolution of Norman manors, often converted into farms after the seigneurial period. Its hybrid architecture, between noble and firm residence, bears witness to the economic and social adaptations of rural elites in the 17th and 18th centuries. The sources, such as the works of Bernard Gourbin or the archives of the Mérimée base, underline its heritage importance in Bessin.

External links