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Manoir ferme de la Varende dans le Calvados

Calvados

Manoir ferme de la Varende

    1811 D511
    14140 au Mesnil-Simon

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
2e moitié XVIe siècle
Initial construction
XVIIe siècle
Enlargement is
1806
Change of ownership
XIXe siècle
New Norman transformations
23 juin 1933
Classification of the dovecote
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Colombia: registration by order of 23 June 1933

Key figures

Thibault de la Varende - First known lord Burial visible to the Authieux-Papions.
Auguste Lyée de Belleau - Owner in 1806 Give the manor to the Challemel.
Famille Lambert - Auge Viscounts (XVIIth–XVIIIth) Owners before 1806 by inheritance.

Origin and history

The Varende Manor House, located in Mesnil-Simon in Calvados, is an emblematic building of the 2nd half of the 16th century. His name comes from the river crossing the park, and he was originally a "Fief de haubert" dependent on the baronnerie of Saint-Julien. This stone mansion, with its intersected wooden parts, perfectly illustrates the Lexovian style, characteristic of the Lisieux region.

The seigneury of La Varende was first owned by the eponymous family, including Thibault de la Varende, whose burial was still visible to the Authieux-Papions. Over the centuries, the estate passed into the hands of local families (Coursery, La Fresnay, Soubzmont, La Luthumière) before being traded to Lambert, Viscounts d'Auge, in the 17th century. In 1806, Auguste Lyée de Belleau, married to the heiress Lambert, gave up the manor to the Challemel de la Rivière, then to the Laisné des Hayes.

The architecture of the mansion evolved significantly: enlarged in the 17th and 18th centuries, it underwent major transformations in the 19th century (perron, neo-norman bowl-window, dazier facade). Nearby, a cylindrical dovecote from the 16th-17th century, rare by its triangular dovecotes, was inscribed in the Historic Monuments in 1933. This dovecote, with its coronation tablets on consoles, bears witness to seigneurial prestige.

The mansion thus combines medieval elements (woodpans) and later additions, reflecting the stylistic and social evolutions of Normandy. Its history, marked by family alliances and inheritances, makes it a rich heritage, anchored in the landscape of the Pays d'Auge. Arcisse de Caumont and Patrice Gourbin studied his style, including his neo-Norman influence in the 19th century.

External links