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Kerduel Manor à Lignol dans le Morbihan

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir

Kerduel Manor

    Kerduel
    56160 Lignol
Private property
Manoir de Kerduel
Manoir de Kerduel
Crédit photo : Cadouf - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1437
First mention of the seigneury
1589
Marriage transmission
XVIe siècle
Construction of the first house
XVIIe siècle
Addition of the Western Flag
31 janvier 1989
Registration for Historic Monuments
1989
Purchase and catering
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Facades and roofs (Case C 495): inscription by order of 31 January 1989

Key figures

Jean Le Courhin - Lord of Kerduel in 1437 First known owner, Rohan vassal.
Louis d’Outreville - Lord of Suillado Owner in 1589 by wedding ring.
Jean du Pérenno - Sénéchal de Guémené Heir of Kerduel in the 16th century.
Pierre Le Vicomte - Owner by marriage (1689) Husband of Jeanne de Pérenno.
François Adda - Manor restorer Purchaser in 1989, initiators of the works.

Origin and history

Kerduel Manor House, located in the eponymous hamlet of the commune of Lignol (Morbihan, Brittany), is a composite building built in three countrysides. The first house, erected in the 16th century, consists of two wings articulated around a stone screw staircase, while a western pavilion with a high four-sided roof, dating from the 17th century, is attached to it. At the back, a later appentis completes the whole, which also includes a cylindrical tower with a remarkable staircase. The facades and roofs of the mansion were listed as historical monuments in 1989, after its acquisition in 1989 by François Adda, who began its restoration.

The seigneury of Kerduel, attested from 1437, originally belonged to Jean Le Courhin, vassal of Charles de Rohan, sire of Guémené. Transmitted by successive alliances — notably to Louis d'Outreville in 1589, then to the families of Pérenno and Le Vicomte — the mansion changed hands several times before being transformed into a farm by the Guyomard family. Its history reflects the seigneurial and matrimonial dynamics of the Ancien Régime Brittany, marked by hereditary transmissions and strategic marriages. The inscriptions on the well (1838) and the shed (1799) bear witness to continued occupation until the modern era.

Architecturally, the mansion combines defensive and residential elements characteristic of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The facade, adorned with sill windows, contrasts with the cylindrical staircase tower, typical of Breton noble houses. The 17th century pavilion, with its cornice on modillons, illustrates the evolution of tastes towards more comfort and ornamentation. Ranked for its facades and roofs, the building today embodies both historical and architectural heritage, preserved despite the risks of demolition mentioned in the 20th century.

External links