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Hambye Abbey à Hambye dans la Manche

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Abbaye
Eglise romane et gothique
Manche

Hambye Abbey

    7 Route Abbaye
    50450 Percy-en-Normandie
Owned by the department; private property
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Abbaye de Hambye
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Crédit photo : Xfigpower - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1145
Foundation of the Abbey
1181
Head of the Benedictine Order
1249
Lanthenac Foundation
1790
National good
1902
First ranking
1964
Purchase by department
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Ruins of the church: classification by decree of 12 August 1902. Buildings of the porterie and the abbey house delimited by a red tint on the plan annexed to the decree: classification by order of 10 April 1925 Capitular room, room of the dead, adjoining vaulted rooms; kitchens; bakery, press, stables (limited by a yellow hue on the plan annexed to the decree): classification by decree of 16 May 1925. Abbatial enclosures of the abbey, including the terrace overlooking the Moines orchard; the restraint that is barring the valley; the bief of the former mills (disappeared) and its hydraulic arrangements; the enclosure walls that delimit it (cf. Hambye C 453 to 458, 1423, 1426 to 1429, says The Abbey; Percy C 1, placed Le Pré de l'Abbaye, 2, placed Le Taillis de l'Abbaye): by order of 2 May 1995

Key figures

Guillaume II Paynel - Founder of the Abbey Lord and Baron of Hambye in 1145.
Louis d’Estouteville - Lord and defender Husband of Jeanne Paynel, buried in the choir.
Jeanne Paynel - Last Paynel heiress Passed the seigneury to Louis d'Estouteville in 1414.
Dom Robert - Founding monk Participated in the creation of the abbey of Lanthenac.
Claude de Mesmes - Abbot in the 17th century Knight of Malta and Abbé of Hambye.

Origin and history

The Abbey of Our Lady of Hambye, founded around 1145 by William II Paynel, local lord, is a Benedictine monastery affiliated with the congregation of Tiron. Raised between the late 12th and 13th centuries, it became a major religious and economic centre in Normandy, mother of the abbeys of Longues and Valmont. Donations (land, tithes, churches) ensure its prosperity until the 14th century, before a gradual decline from the 15th century.

The abbey, chief of order in 1181, swarmed into Brittany with the foundation of the abbey of Lanthenac in 1249. In the 15th century, the seigneury of Hambye passed into the hands of Louis d'Estouteville, defender of Mount Saint-Michel, and then to the families of Orléans-Longueville and Matignon-Grimaldi, princes of Monaco. The Revolution turned the abbey into a national good: the church was sold as a stone quarry in 1810, and the cloister dismantled in the years 1830-1840.

Classified as a historic monument since 1902, the abbey was partially bought in 1956 by private individuals (the Beck spouses), then by the Manche department in 1964. The restoration campaigns (from 1960 to 2010) save the Gothic choir, the capitular hall, or even medieval cuisine. Today, the site combines evocative ruins (nef, cloister) and restored rooms (parlor, scriptorium), offering a rare testimony of Norman monastic architecture.

The abbey church, built between 1180 and 1250, illustrates the Roman-Gothic transition with its choir with radiant chapels and its 30-metre bell tower. The convent buildings, organized around a missing cloister, housed emblematic spaces such as the room of the dead (frescoes of the 13th century) or the refectory of the monks. The abbatial house, added in the seventeenth century, completes this ensemble, today shared between departmental and private property.

The abbey drew its wealth of land, mills, salt and fisheries, controlling six abbeys and five priories at its peak. His notable abbots include Louis d'Estouteville (1504–1512), also Abbé de Savigny, or Claude de Mesmes (17th century). The coat of arms of the founders Paynel once decorated the porch. The site, open to visitors, belongs to the network of departmental museums of the Channel.

External links