Creation of the deposit in Langonnet 1806 (≈ 1806)
Deposit of initial standards in southern Brittany.
1857
Transfer to Hennebont
Transfer to Hennebont 1857 (≈ 1857)
Installation in the Abbey of Joy.
août 1858
Imperial visit
Imperial visit août 1858 (≈ 1858)
Official opening of the site.
1920-1921
Total acquisition of enclosure
Total acquisition of enclosure 1920-1921 (≈ 1921)
Expansion of the field of the haras.
3e quart XIXe siècle
Construction period
Construction period 3e quart XIXe siècle (≈ 1962)
Main developments of the stud.
6 novembre 1995
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 6 novembre 1995 (≈ 1995)
Protection of the stud (excluding building 1986).
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Couple impérial - Official visitors
Inauguration of the stud in 1858.
Origin and history
The Haras national de Hennebont originated in the transfer, in 1857, of the stallion depot originally installed at Langonnet Abbey since 1806. This trip was intended to improve accessibility for southern Brittany, which was then poorly served by narrow and impassable roads. The site chosen was the enclosure of the Abbey of Joy in Hennebont, where the new depot was officially inaugurated during the visit of the imperial couple in August 1858. At that time, the Haras Service had only five hectares around the abbey, the rest of the enclosure being acquired only between 1920 and 1921.
The haras facilities, built in the third quarter of the 19th century, are organized around two central courtyards surrounded by seven stables. The complex also includes ancillary buildings such as a nursing clinic, a forge, a saddlery, and accommodation for the director and staff. The historic entrance to the site followed the bank of the Blavet to the portery of the abbey, before the total acquisition of the enclosure altered this access. The stud, with the exception of a building built in 1986, has been listed in Historical Monuments since 1995.
The Hennebont stud shows the evolution of the infrastructures dedicated to equine breeding in France in the 19th century, marked by a desire for modernization and centralisation. Its establishment in a former monastic site also reflects the re-use of religious heritage for secular purposes after the Revolution. Today, the haras remains an architectural and historical testimony of this period, while maintaining a vocation linked to the world of horses.