Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Manoir du Pavillon and its triple portal: registration by decree of 2 July 1927
Key figures
Arcisse de Caumont - Historian and archaeologist
Documented the mansion in the 19th.
Origin and history
The Pavillon mansion is a building located in Ryes, Calvados department, Normandy. Built mainly in the 17th century, it combines older architectural elements, such as a stair tower and a part of the house dating back to the 15th century and even the 14th century for certain structures. The manor house consists of a coated stone house, a stone gate, and several adjoining buildings organized around a courtyard. Its architecture reflects successive transformations, including a complete renovation in the 17th century and additions such as a pavilion and a body of latrines.
Since July 2, 1927, the site has been listed as a historic monument for its manor and triple portal, and has undergone significant degradation over time. Several ancillary buildings were demolished in the 2010s and the slate cover of the house has been replaced by temporary tarpaulins since 2014-2015. The windows are now missing or broken, and general restoration projects, including the installation of a cider factory, are mentioned. The manor house, transformed into a farm probably during the Revolution, preserves traces of its seigneurial past, as dovecotes embedded under the cornices.
Historical sources, such as the works of Arcisse de Caumont in the 19th century, mention the mansion as an example of Norman rural architecture, combining residential and agricultural functions. The buildings around the courtyard, such as the barn, barn, or press, were redesigned in the 18th and 19th centuries to accommodate agricultural needs. The site thus illustrates the evolution of Norman manors, from seigneurial residences to farms, while retaining defensive or symbolic elements such as the watchtower or the stair tower in view.
The Pavillon mansion is representative of the social and economic dynamics of rural Normandy. In the 17th century, this region was marked by a mixed economy, combining agriculture, livestock farming, and wine production, an activity still mentioned in contemporary restoration projects. The mansions, often centres of seigneurial estates, became after the Farm Revolution, reflecting the land and social upheavals of the time. The current state of degradation of the mansion highlights the challenges of preserving rural heritage, between historical memory and economic pressure.
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