Church of Saint-Eugène

The church was built in the 12th century. The nave is pierced with Roman bays in full arch. It is surmounted by a tapered spire. The south wall is divided by three buttresses and the north wall by four. It underwent numerous alterations until the 17th century. The main facade of the building is a gable wall. The low arch portal is framed by four buttresses. In the eastern part, two round-arched bays alternate with buttresses. A door opens into the nave at the fourth bay.

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Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Monuments

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons/ChBougui

Church of Saint-Pierre

The oldest part of the church dates from the 11th century. Two Romanesque windows seem to remain today. The building was rebuilt in the 17th and 18th centuries. To the north two buttresses delimit the western and eastern parts, whereas they are only present on the eastern part to the south. The walls are pierced with rectangular bays, four in the south and at least two in the north. A door provides access to the outside in the eastern southern part. The annex is opened by two rectangular bays. The entire nave is covered by a double-paned roof. A gable roof covers the annex. A bell tower with a square base is stooped on the ridge near the facade. Its spire is hexagonal.

Wikimedia Commons/Pascal Radigue

Church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste

The commune of Manerbe and its church Saint-Jean-Baptiste already existed before the year 1000. The latter was rebuilt in 1513 when the Confrérie des Chantons was founded. The portal is from the 17th century. It was made for the abbey of Val Richer then was installed in the 18th century in Manerbe. Before the Revolution, the patronage belonged to the lord of the place. The main facade is a gable wall cut in its northern part by a bell tower. The portal is framed by a low arch. The wide gable is decorated with an oculus and surmounted by a ridge cross. A buttress supports the southern end of the wall. The bell tower rises on three levels supported at their corners by buttresses.

Wikimedia Commons

Church of Saint-Martin

The church of Saint-Martin de La Roque-Baignard was originally built in the Romanesque period, it was largely rebuilt in the 16th and 17th centuries. The decorations and interior furniture date from the 18th century. The gabled western façade has a curved entrance. Two buttresses support the façade. The straight buttress is larger. A clock is placed at the level of the roof. Finally, the bell tower has a square base and four dormer windows are present on its roof.