Columns of cartage XIIIe siècle (fin) (≈ 1384)
Re-use in the structure
XVe siècle
Initial construction
Initial construction XVe siècle (≈ 1550)
Presumed period of the seigneurial mansion
XVIe siècle
Sculpted door added
Sculpted door added XVIe siècle (≈ 1650)
Rich decor with pelican and foliage
3 février 1928
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 3 février 1928 (≈ 1928)
Registration by official order
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
House, known as Manoir du Grévarin: inscription by order of 3 February 1928
Key figures
Edmond Meyer - Historical or descriptive
Description of buildings and outbuildings
Origin and history
The Grévarin mansion, located in Vernon, Eure, is a 15th century vestige, probably linked to the medieval fief of Gamilly, called Grès-Varin or Grévarin. The buildings described by Edmond Meyer included floors, bedrooms, stables, a barn, a press, and a courtyard and garden surrounded by vineyards. Today, there remain only disparate elements in a property on the rue de Verdun, mixing cut stone, wood panels and an attic frame. These vestiges, partly reassembled, reflect a hybrid architecture between residential and agricultural functions.
The stone part, flanked by a pentagonal staircase turret, houses a 16th-century door decorated with complex sculptures: a pelican perched on a trunk, curly foliage, and a pinacle-framed accolade. In the vicinity, a wooden carriage is built on two 13th-century columns, the capitals of which once preserved traces of paint. These architectural details suggest an evolution of the site over centuries, between seigneurial mansion and utility outbuildings.
Ranked Historic Monument by order of 3 February 1928, the mansion illustrates the legacy of Norman fiefs. Its current location, at the crossroads of the Red Cross, and its fragmentary state underline the urban transformations of Vernon. The ancient documents and the elements reported complicate the exact reconstruction of its original appearance, but make it a valuable testimony of medieval and Renaissance civil architecture in Normandy.
The decorated door, the most remarkable element, concentrates a religious symbolism (the Pelican, often associated with Christian sacrifice) and artistic, typical of the transition between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The materials — stone for the ground floor, wood for the floors — reflect local constructive techniques, adapted to the available resources. The whole, though partial, offers an overview of the ways of life of the rural lords and their domain.
The accuracy of its location is considered satisfactory a priori (note 6/10), with an official address at 96 rue de Verdun, although GPS coordinates suggest number 122. This minor disparity highlights the challenges of mapping historical remains in urban areas. The manor house, now part of a private property, is not open to visitors, limiting its accessibility to the public.
Available sources (Monumentum, Merimée base) confirm its registration as Historical Monuments, but do not specify its current use (residence, rental, etc.). His story thus remains partly enigmatic, inviting further research on Gamilly's fief and its occupants, whose local archives could keep track of.