The Brochure Series of Architectural Illustration, Volume 01, No. 10, October 1895. - French Farmhouses. by Various
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page 3 of 18 (16%)
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from the ravages of time and hard usage, and both are at present, and
for a long time have been, used as farmhouses. The Manoir d'Ango is the finer and more important of the two, and is better preserved in some of its more interesting features. [Illustration: LXXIV. Ferme de Turpe, Normandy.] It is one of the main beauties of the charming village of Varengeville-sur-Mer, on the north coast of Normandy. It is now converted into a farmhouse, but in it once a celebrated privateersman of Dieppe received the ambassadors of the King of Portugual. There are still many evidences of the former dignity and grandeur in its present degradation. Ango was strictly a _manoir_ in the French sense, that is, a residence of the second class--not a château, such as Chambord or Blois. The principal part of the building consists of but one story with an open gallery beneath, supported by an arcade with columns bearing finely carved caps ornamented with female heads, angels, etc. In the interior as well as on the exterior may be seen fragments of sculpture which show much refinement. In one of the rooms of the tower a monumental mantel carved in stone bears in its centre the bust of an old man having in his hand a globe surmounted by a cross, the imperial emblem. This may be the portrait of one of the founders of the Ango family. LXXIII to LXXVI. |
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