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Kerbiquet Manor à Gourin dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Morbihan

Kerbiquet Manor

    541-543 Kerbiquet
    56110 Gourin
Manoir de Kerbiquet
Manoir de Kerbiquet
Manoir de Kerbiquet
Manoir de Kerbiquet
Manoir de Kerbiquet
Manoir de Kerbiquet
Crédit photo : photographe Villard - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1445
Beginning of the Seigneurie Guégant
1564-1580
Construction of the mansion
29 juin 1675
Red cup revolt
1754
Change of ownership
20 mars 1934
Classification of the well
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The well of the 16th in the courtyard (Box K 258): inscription by order of 20 March 1934

Key figures

Louis Guégant - Royal Prosecutor and Manufacturer Sponsor of the mansion in 1580
Catherine Glévédé - Wife of Louis Guégant Mentioned in the founding inscription
François du Fresnay - Baron du Fauët Acquire the mansion by marriage
Guillaume Morvan - Leader of the revolt Leads the riot of 1675
Jean Joseph Euzennou de Kersalaün - Owner in 1754 Last known lord of the mansion

Origin and history

Kerbiquet Manor House, located in Gourin (Morbihan), is a 16th-century building built between 1564 and 1580 by Louis Guégant, the city's royal attorney. An inscription in Breton on the facade, dated 1580, attests to his foundation with his wife Catherine Glévédé. This mansion, symbol of local power, belonged to the Guégant family since 1445 before passing into the hands of the Fresnay and then the Euzennou of Kersalaün in the 18th century.

During the Revolt of the Red Caps in 1675, the mansion was the scene of a violent episode: peasants in and around Gourin, led by Guillaume Morvan, forced the Sieur de Kerbiquet to sign statements under pressure. This event illustrates the social tensions of the period around taxes such as the gabelle.

Architecturally, the manor house suffered major destruction: the chapel Saint-Conogan, the dovecote (dated 1564) and the monumental gate disappeared. Only the house, reduced by two meters in the 19th century, and its octagonal Renaissance well, classified as a historical monument in 1934, remain. The facade preserves a rare gallery of four stone arcades, worn by columns with capitals, as well as a carved pediment door, testimonies of its past prestige.

Inside, elements such as the Louis XIII fireplaces and a stone door with metopes recall its original fascist, although the painted decorations of 1617 disappeared. The well, contemporary of the house, is distinguished by its monolithic margin carved with Renaissance motifs and human figures, highlighting the artistic influence of the period.

The mansion reflects the turbulent history of the Breton nobility, between seigneurial power, peasant revolts and architectural transformations. Its partial classification in 1934 preserves an iconic Renaissance heritage in inland Brittany.

External links