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Manoir du Breil-aux-Francs en Mayenne

Manoir du Breil-aux-Francs

    Le Breil aux Francs
    53260 Entrammes

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
2000
1241
First reference to Templar
1268
Templar house confirmed
1274
Rent assigned to the Commander
1312
Transition to Hospitallers
1328
Last mention of a Commander
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Thibault de Mondamer - Local Lord Assigns an annuity in 1274.
Commandeur du Breil-aux-Francs (1328) - Hospital manager Manages the united houses of Breil and Thévalle.

Origin and history

The Breil-aux-Francs Manor House, historically known as a Templar Commandery, is located in the Mayenne department, 3 km fromEntrammes, on the road leading to Laval. The first written records date back to the 13th century, with Latin designations such as Fratres militariae Templi... apud Brolium-Francorum (1241) or Domus militariae Templi de Brolio-Francorum (1268), confirming his belonging to the Knights of the Temple. These medieval sources, from ecclesiastical archives, emphasize his role as a religious and military house before the dissolution of the order in 1312.

From 1274, notarial acts attested to transactions related to the site, such as an annuity of 10 subassigned by Thibault de Mondamer on a nearby farmhouse, for the benefit of the Commander of the Breil-aux-Francs. After the fall of the Templars in 1312, the Commanderie passed to the Hospitallers of Saint John of Jerusalem, via its attachment to the house of Thévalle. A subsequent mention in 1328 still evokes a "commander of the Breil-aux-Francs", probably responsible for the two houses united. However, the exact origin of the site remains unknown, as the archives do not specify its foundation or its first occupants.

The Breil-aux-Francs illustrates the transition between the medieval military orders, from the Templars — abolished for presumed heresy — to the Hospitallers, who perpetuated their charitable and defensive heritage. Its history is part of the network of commanderies of the Pays de la Loire, testifying to the religious and economic structures that quadrupled the region in the Middle Ages. The available sources, mainly charters and a local historical dictionary (Angot & Gaugain, 1900-1910), offer a fragmentary but valuable overview of this templar and hospitable heritage.

External links