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Manor of the Mesnil-Vitey à Airel dans la Manche

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Manoir
Manche

Manor of the Mesnil-Vitey

    1 Rue du Mesnil Vitey
    50680 Airel
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Manoir du Mesnil-Vitey
Crédit photo : Xfigpower - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1229
First mention of the fief
1435
Confiscation by Henri V
1457
Return to the Fiervilles
1480
Construction of the current mansion
1506
Transmission to Guillaume Acher
1613
Creation of fairs and markets
1789
Revolutionary destructions
1949
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Façades, roofs, vestiges of the wall: inscription by decree of 22 November 1949

Key figures

Robert de Fierville - Lord of Mesnil-Vitey (1457) Marguerite de la Luzerne, recipient of restitution.
Lucas Acher - Manor builder (circa 1480) Administrator for the Bishop of Bayeux.
Guillaume Acher - Heir of Lucas Acher (1506) Son and continuity of the line.
Jean Acher - Lord Fair breeder (1613) Creation of the market and fairs.
Henri Acher - Lord in 1598 Mentioned in the search for nobility.
Jean Michel Guérin du Boscq de Beaumont - Owner in the 20th century Politician and last owner cited.

Origin and history

The Manor of Mesnil-Vitey is an old fortified house built at the end of the 15th century on the banks of the Vieille Vire, in Airel, in the Manche department. Originally owned by the Fierville family in the 13th century, it was confiscated in 1435 by Henry V of England during the Hundred Years War, before being returned in 1457 to Robert de Fierville, husband of Marguerite de la Luzerne. This strategic site protected the Saint-Louis Bridge, a key crossing point in the region.

Around 1480 the estate was acquired by Lucas Acher, administrator of the barony of Neuilly for the bishop of Bayeux. He built the current strong house, known as Mesnilvité. When he died in 1506, the mansion passed to his son Guillaume, then to his descendants, including Henri Acher, mentioned as lord in 1598. The Acher family developed the estate, obtaining in 1613 the right of Louis XIII to organize a weekly market and two annual fairs, whose fair of Bourgais still remains today in the form of a garage.

The mansion changed hands by marriage alliances in the 17th century, passing to the Regnault families of Segrais, Croisilles, and then Le Bedey and the Boscq de Beaumont, which kept it almost two centuries. During the Revolution, he suffered destruction: two crenellated towers and all the coat of arms were destroyed. In the 20th century, it belonged to the politician Jean Michel Guérin of the Boscq de Beaumont. The house in square, surrounded by remains of crenelated walls and moats, still bears the coat of arms of Lucas Acher above his door.

Partially classified as historical monuments in 1949, the mansion illustrates the evolution of a Norman seigneury, marked by medieval conflicts, family alliances and architectural transformations. Its quadrangular enclosure, polygonal turret and defensive elements recall its both residential and strategic role in the Vire Valley.

External links