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Herivals Farm Barn à Luzarches dans le Val-d'oise

Val-doise

Herivals Farm Barn

    1 Ferme D Hérivaux
    95270 Luzarches
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Grange de la ferme dHérivaux
Crédit photo : P.poschadel - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1140
Foundation of Hermitage
1160
Erection in abbey
1187
First mention of barn
1632
A devastating fire
1791
Sale as a national good
1998
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Grange, in full (Case E 38): entry by order of 7 January 1998

Key figures

Ascelin de Marly - Founder and hermit Created hermitage in 1140 on his land.
Maurice de Sully - Bishop of Paris Finished the abbey and its attachment to the Augustins.
François Molé - Abbé commendataire Disaster management (1647-1712) of the abbey.
Benjamin Constant - Revolutionary owner Aceta and partially demolished the abbey in 1795.
Georges Mauboussin - Owner between two wars Restore the farm and adjust wings.
Paul Ruaud - Architect Designs extensions for Mauboussin.

Origin and history

The barn of the Farm of Herivaaux, located in Luzarches in Val-d'Oise, dates from the 4th quarter of the 12th century. It belonged to the abbey of Herivaux, founded in 1140 by Ascelin, seigneur of Marly-la-Ville, on land ceded by the Counts of Beaumont and Clermont. The initial hermitage became an Augustinian abbey in 1160 under the impulse of Maurice de Sully, bishop of Paris, who financed the church and cloister. The barn, attested as early as 1187, illustrates the agricultural importance of the estate, with a three vessel structure typical of the agro-pastoral barns.

The abbey prospered thanks to donations and income from cures and priories in Île-de-France. In the 13th century, Hérivals became a parish, but gradually declined. In 1632 a fire seriously damaged the buildings, requiring repairs until 1634. The reform of the Augustins in 1639, led by Father Faure, attempted to redress the situation, but the mismanagement of Abbé François Molé (1647-1712) aggravated the degradation, reducing the community to a handful of monks.

The French Revolution marked a turning point: the abbey, sold as a national property in 1791, was acquired by Benjamin Constant in 1795. The latter had most buildings demolished, saving only the farm and its pavilion. The barn, separated from the abbey, was preserved and classified as a Historic Monument in 1998. Today, it remains as a witness to medieval architecture, surrounded by buildings rebuilt after the fire of the eighteenth century.

The site, passed into the hands of jeweler Georges Mauboussin in the inter-war period, was restored and enlarged by architect Paul Ruaud. During the Second World War, the sites served as residences for German officers. Although the abbey is today a private lotie property, the barn and some ruins of the church remain visible, recalling its monastic and agricultural past.

The barn is distinguished by its three five-span vessels, bounded by arched arches. Unlike the cereal barns, its openings are located on the drip walls, suggesting a mixed use (farming and storage). Texts from 1714 confirm the partial use of the lower side as stables, while maintaining a north-south orientation typical of the cereal barns.

External links