Construction of the mansion 1577 (≈ 1577)
Building in Henry IV style.
1578
Building the enclosure
Building the enclosure 1578 (≈ 1578)
Walls and corner pavilions built.
XIXe siècle
Renovation of the round tower
Renovation of the round tower XIXe siècle (≈ 1865)
Minor architectural changes.
30 mars 1978
Registration for Historic Monuments
Registration for Historic Monuments 30 mars 1978 (≈ 1978)
Protection of facades, roofs and enclosures.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Fronts and roofs of the mansion; enclosure wall with corner pavilion; Entrance porch with gate (Box F 47): entry by order of 30 March 1978
Origin and history
Bellegarde Manor House, located in Tourouvre, Perche, Orne, is a building dating back to the 15th century. From this first period remain a round tower redesigned in the 19th century and a room on the rear facade. The main body of the mansion was built in 1577, adopting a typical Henri IV style, marked by high roofs and alternating brick and stone links.
A quadrilateral enclosure, built in 1578, includes the mansion and its outbuildings. This wall, originally reinforced by two square pavilions at the corners (only one remains today), also delimits a closed garden. A small pavilion, next to the northern gable, extends the old stables, testifying to the spatial organization typical of the seigneurial houses of the Renaissance.
The facades, roofs, the enclosure wall with its corner pavilion, and the entrance porch and its gate, were included in the inventory of historical monuments by order of 30 March 1978. The site, owned by a private company, retains architectural elements representative of the 16th and 17th centuries, although parts were later modified, such as the round tower in the 19th century.
The location of the manor house, 2 km south-west of the village of Tourouvre, in a municipality now integrated in Tourouvre au Perche, highlights its anchoring in the landscape of Perche, an area marked by a dense rural and seigneurial heritage. The available sources (Wikipedia, Monumentum, Mérimée base) confirm its heritage importance, both for its architecture and for its history linked to the local nobility.
The Henry IV style, visible in the constructive details, reflects a period of transition between the Renaissance and French classicism. The brick and stone links, typical of this period, as well as the high roof with the French, make it a remarkable example of the civil architecture of the late 16th century. Subsequent developments, such as stables or tower modifications, illustrate its functional evolution over the centuries.
Finally, the registration of historic monuments in 1978 preserved this whole, while emphasizing its role in local history. Although information about its original owners or sponsors is lacking, the manor remains a tangible testimony of the aristocratic habitat in the Perch, between the late Middle Ages and the modern era.
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