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Manoir Saint-Ortaire or Manoir de la Mare du Dézert au Dézert dans la Manche

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Manche

Manoir Saint-Ortaire or Manoir de la Mare du Dézert

    Saint-Ortaire
    50620 Le Dézert
Manoir de Saint-Ortaire
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Manoir Saint-Ortaire ou manoir de la Mare du Dézert
Crédit photo : Jgallois - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
2000
1417
Exile of the family of La Mare
1449
Return of Guillaume de La Mare
vers 1500
Reconstruction of the mansion
1614
Sale to Michel Martin
2004
Registration Historic Monuments
2014
Extension of protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

In total, the manor, chapel and fountain, excluding the modern extension backed by the west gable of the manor (cad. ZO 38, 39, place-dite Saint-Ortaire): inscription by decree of 10 June 2014

Key figures

Guillaume de La Mare (1451-1525) - Chanoine and Doctor of Law Suspected commander of the mansion, near Charles VIII.
Hugues de La Mare - Armed cleric Participated in the capture of Cyprus (1189).
Louis et Richard de La Mare - Knights Defend the Mont Saint-Michel (1424-1427).
Armand-Jérôme Bignon - Librarian of Louis XV Later owner of the mansion.
Yves Nédélec - Local historian Studyed property history (1974).

Origin and history

The Manor House of Saint-Ortaire, also known as the Manor House of the Mare du Dézert, is a seigneurial house located in Le Dézert, in the Manche (Normandy). Built in the early 16th century, it embodies the transition between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, with preserved architecture, including its large double bass room and seigneurial chapel. This monument offers a rare testimony of the organization of noble homes of the period in the region.

The property belonged to the family of La Mare, noble lineage of Cotentin, from the 14th to the 16th century. Exile during the English occupation (1417), she returned after the liberation of Normandy. Guillaume de La Mare (1451-1525), canon and doctor of law, is assigned as sponsor of the reconstruction of the mansion around 1500. His humanist education and his ties to the court of France (he served King Charles VIII) explain the architectural quality of the building, including its carved chimneys and lily-flowered tiles.

The mansion was sold in 1614 to Michel Martin, a rich draper of Saint-Lô, before passing into the hands of personalities such as Armand-Jérôme Bignon, librarian of Louis XV, or Jérome-Joseph-Marie Grimaldi of Monaco. The chapel, dedicated to Saint Ortaire (invoked for the health of children), was redesigned in the 17th century. The site, surrounded by a double enclosure (wall and ditch), was listed at the Historical Monuments in 2004 for its archaeological interest and award-winning restoration (Old French Houses, Fondation du Patrimoine).

The building is distinguished by its medieval chamber-block plan: a large central hall (4.95 m high) accessible by a lintel door, flanked by a rotating staircase and a monumental red stone fireplace. The upper room, superimposed, retains a rare Gothic limestone fireplace. Two spiral staircases serve the rooms and latrines, revealing a hierarchical organisation of space. Architectural indices (like an earlier intermediate cell) suggest a construction phase before 1500, confirming a multi-stage evolution.

The seigneurial chapel, probably originally attached to the entrance gate, and the associated fountain, complete this homogeneous ensemble. The mansion thus illustrates the high status of its owners, combining residential, religious (right of chapel) and agricultural functions (press room, barn). Its inscription in 2014 covers the house, chapel and fountain, excluding a modern extension. The archives also reveal the disappearance of defensive elements, such as a square tower to the north and a double portal to the east.

The research of Yves Nedélech (1974) and the descriptions of notarial acts (1654) highlight the historical importance of the site. The royal lily tiles and the eroded weapons of the family of La Mare (cruix de gules sur fond d'argent) attest to their ties with the French monarchy. Today, a private property, the mansion remains an emblematic example of Norman seigneurial habitat, combining medieval heritage and renaissant innovations.

External links