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Manor of Cipher and dove dans le Calvados

Calvados

Manor of Cipher and dove

    206 Route de Saint-Clair
    14140 Livarot-Pays-d'Auge
Crédit photo : Marjolaine Moreau - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1605
Construction of the dovecote
19 janvier 1927
Historical monument classification
1944
Requisition by Rommel
1978-2001
Owned by Robert Halley
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Manoir de Cimpletot et colombier, located to the west of the church: inscription by decree of 19 January 1927

Key figures

Maréchal Rommel - German General Requisitioned the mansion in 1944.
Robert Halley - Entrepreneur and Mayor Owner from 1978 to 2001.

Origin and history

The Manor House of Ciphertot, located in the commune of Moutiers-Hubert in Calvados, is an emblematic building in the country of Auge. Built mainly in the 16th century, its main body has a rectangular structure on two levels, characterized by wooden panels and a four-sided roof. An octagonal 17th century turret with murderers completes the whole, while a square stone dovecote, dated 1605, stands in the surrounding park. The site is crossed by the river Touques, near the church Saint-Martin.

During World War II, the mansion was requisitioned by Marshal Rommel during the Battle of Normandy in 1944. It was in this area that Rommel was wounded in an air attack, while his staff occupied a nearby house, a former hotel house linked to a paper factory that had disappeared in a fire in 1928. The mansion also belonged to Robert Halley, founder of the Promodès group and mayor of Moutiers-Hubert from 1978 to 2001.

Ranked a historic monument since 19 January 1927, the mansion illustrates Norman rural architecture, combining defensive (murder) and agricultural (colombier) elements. Its dovecote, typical of seigneurial houses, bears witness to the social status of its owners, while the octagonal turret evokes the historical tensions of the region. Rommel's requisition adds a memorial dimension linked to the Liberation of France.

The site is located about 500 metres southwest of the Church of Saint-Martin, in an environment marked by the industrial (paper factory) and agricultural history of the country of Auge. Today, there remains an architectural testimony of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, a period of transition between the Middle Ages and the modern era in Normandy.

External links