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Manor of the Rusquec à Loqueffret dans le Finistère

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Finistère

Manor of the Rusquec

    Rusquec
    29530 Loqueffret
Manoir du Rusquec
Manoir du Rusquec
Manoir du Rusquec
Manoir du Rusquec
Manoir du Rusquec
Crédit photo : Paul Petit - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1427
First seigneurial mention
1480
Wedding of Anceau du Rusquec
début XVIe siècle
Archives preserved
milieu XVIIe siècle
Home extension
26 mai 1986
Partial MH registration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Two basins located in the manor park: inscription by order of 7 August 1926; Facades and roofs of the West Home and its return to square; well; Pigeon; remains of the old 17s house body; remains of the manor enclosure (cad. D 744, 746, 812 and 813): registration by order of 26 May 1986

Key figures

Anceau du Rusquec - Lord and builder Died in 1522, husband of Françoise de Rosnyvinen.
Anne Jehan - Son of Anceau Died in 1536, heir to the mansion.
Alan de Kerlech du Chastel - Lord in the seventeenth century Adds a house body in 1653.
Renée de Lannion - Wife of Alan de Kerlech Marriage in 1637 mentioned in the archives.

Origin and history

The Rusquec mansion is an iconic building located in Loqueffret, Finistère, Brittany. Built in the 16th and 17th centuries, it stands at the edge of the Ellez River (transformed into a lake by a hydraulic power plant), on a hill near the chapel Saint-Herbot, a place of fairs and pardons at the beginning of the 16th century. Its organization in three enclosures (potager, house with outbuildings, orchard) reflects a typical seigneurial structure, integrating wells, dovecote, area to beat and remains of a enclosure.

The oldest archives preserved in the departmental archives of Finistère date from the beginning of the sixteenth century, although the first lord of Rusquec was mentioned in 1427. Part of the current mansion is the work of Anceau du Rusquec (died 1522), married in 1480 to Françoise de Rosnyvinen, and their son Anne Jehan (died 1536). In the mid-17th century, a house corps was added to the north by Alan de Kerlech du Chastel, husband of Renée de Lannion in 1637, as evidenced by an admission of 1653.

The manor house has been partially listed as historical monuments since 1986, protecting its facades, roofs, wells, dovecote, and remains of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Its history is linked to the local Breton nobility and the seigneurial farm, in a landscaped setting marked by the Ellez River and the Saint-Herbot Chapel, classified.

The creation of a hydropower plant turned the river into a lake, erasing the 70-metre waterfall once considered the most beautiful in Brittany. This change illustrates the tensions between natural heritage and industrial development, while stressing the historical importance of the site, both manorial, religious (St. Herbot'ston) and economic (medieval fairs).

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