Norman Switzerland Explained

Norman Switzerland (French: Suisse Normande) is a part of Normandy, France, in the border region of the departments Calvados and Orne. Its name comes from its rugged and verdant relief resembling the Swiss Alps, with gorges carved by the river Orne and its tributaries, and by erosion in the Armorican Massif between Putanges-Pont-Écrepin and Thury-Harcourt. The river has created a rugged landscape.

Churches, houses and farm buildings have a style closer to what is found across the English Channel in the United Kingdom (i.e., stone buildings with slate roofs), rather than the timber structures of the Pays d'Auge.

There are many outdoor tourist activities: canoeing, horse riding, rock climbing, hang gliding, kayaking, paragliding and mountain biking.

Geography

Suisse Normande is located at the end of the Armorican Massif.[1] In the hills, small, steep fields are often bordered by thick hedges or granite dry stone walls and have dense vegetation. Mont Pinçon, is the highest point in Norman Switzerland, at in elevation.[2]

The main water course ways through the area are the river Orne and three of its tributaries, Noireau, Rouvre and the Baize.[3] In addition, two more rivers run through the area and merge with the Noireau, the Vere and the Druance. From Putanges-Pont-Écrepin part of the Orne has been made into an artificial 6 km long lake covering 240 acres called Rabodanges Lake.[4]

Towns and Communes

The main towns are Athis-de-l'Orne, Clécy, Condé-sur-Noireau, Pont-d'Ouilly, Putanges-Pont-Écrepin and Thury-Harcourt.

A total of 75 communes from six different Communauté de communes make up Suisse Normand as shown below;[3]

Communauté de communes Cingal-Suisse Normande

  1. Cauville
  2. Cesny-les-Sources
  3. Clécy
  4. Combray
  5. Cossesseville
  6. Croisilles
  7. Culey-le-Patry
  8. Donnay
  9. Espins
  10. Esson
  11. Grimbosq
  12. La Pommeraye
  13. Le Bô
  14. Le Vey
  15. Les Moutiers-en-Cinglais
  16. Martainville
  17. Meslay, Calvados
  18. Montillières-sur-Orne
  19. Mutrécy
  20. Ouffières
  21. Saint-Lambert
  22. Saint-Laurent-de-Condel
  23. Saint-Omer
  24. Saint-Rémy
  25. Thury-Harcourt-le-Hom

Communauté de communes Intercom de la Vire au Noireau

  1. Condé-en-Normandie
  2. La Villette, Calvados
  3. Périgny
  4. Pontécoulant
  5. Saint-Denis-de-Méré
  6. Terres de Druance

Communauté d'agglomération Flers Agglo

  1. Athis-Val de Rouvre
  2. Aubusson
  3. Berjou
  4. Cahan
  5. Caligny
  6. Cerisy-Belle-Étoile
  7. Durcet
  8. La Bazoque
  9. La Lande-Saint-Siméon
  10. Ménil-Hubert-sur-Orne
  11. Montilly-sur-Noireau
  12. Sainte-Honorine-la-Chardonne
  13. Sainte-Opportune
  14. Saint-Philbert-sur-Orne
  15. Saint-Pierre-du-Regard

Communauté de communes du Pays de Falaise

  1. Bonnœil
  2. Cordey
  3. Fourneaux-le-Val
  4. Le Détroit
  5. Le Mesnil-Villement
  6. Les Isles-Bardel
  7. Les Loges-Saulces
  8. Leffard
  9. Martigny-sur-l'Ante
  10. Noron-l'Abbaye
  11. Pierrefitte-en-Cinglais
  12. Pierrepont
  13. Pont-d'Ouilly
  14. Rapilly
  15. Saint-Germain-Langot
  16. Saint-Martin-de-Mieux
  17. Tréprel

Communauté de communes du Val d'Orne

  1. Bazoches-au-Houlme
  2. Champcerie
  3. Craménil
  4. Giel-Courteilles
  5. Ménil-Gondouin
  6. Ménil-Hermei
  7. Ménil-Vin
  8. Neuvy-au-Houlme
  9. Putanges-le-Lac
  10. Saint-André-de-Briouze
  11. Sainte-Honorine-la-Guillaume

Communauté de communes d'Argentan Intercom

  1. Écouché-les-Vallées

History

The area was first described in 1828 as being like Switzerland in appearance when local historian, Jean-Frédéric Galeron (1794-1838), describes the area of Saint-Clair, Clécy and Athis and Pont-d'Ouilly as 'It's a little Switzerland for the inhabitants of Falaise'.[5]

The term “Norman Switzerland” was popularized in particular by the railway companies which made the sites of the area accessible to a greater number and use it for promotional purposes. A State Railways poster, from the 1900s, promotes "travel at reduced prices" and shows, under the title "La Suisse normande", a view of the Orne valley in Clecy. In these same years, postcards began to fix the name, and hoteliers also took advantage of thiese flattering images, for example in the 1900s, Clécy had a “hotel of little Switzerland” and a “hotel of the Norman Alps”.[6]

After the First World War, the mayor of Clécy wanted to cement the town as a major tourist resort notably by creating safe drinking water and the proper treatment of efluents, a rarity for the time. In 1932, the mayor, then invited the Under-Secretary of State for Tourism, who visited Thury-Harcourt, LaRoche d'Oëtre, Falaise, and solemnly declared Clécy capital of Swiss Normandy.[7] In 1933, Father Joseph Delacotte wrote a tourist guide entitled "La Suisse normande", explaining the area was larger than what was originally defined and in 1935, the tourist office of the Suisse Normande had 74 signposts produced, with its header, which showed tourists the sites to visit.[8] 4

In 1960 Rabodanges Lake was formed by EDF when they created a hydroelectric dam on the Orne River[9]

In 2007 Thury-Harcourt hosted the European Canoe Polo Championship.[10]

Places

Monuments

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Suisse Normande: Normandy by nature!. Falaise - Suisse Normande.
  2. Web site: Mont Pinçon Heath. Calvados Tourisme.
  3. Web site: Map of Suisse Normande.
  4. Web site: Lac de Rabodanges PUTANGES-LE-LAC : Normandy Tourism. Normandy Tourism, France.
  5. Book: Statistics of the district of Falaise. Volume 2 by Jean-Frédéric Galeron.
  6. Web site: "Suisse-Normande". Fédération des guides de Normandie.
  7. Web site: L'Œuvre. September 11, 1932. Gallica.
  8. Joseph Delacotte, La Suisse normande, ses beaux sites, leur histoire, leur poésie, Jouan & Bigot, Caen, 1933, p. 5.
  9. Web site: Orne. A Rabodanges, plongez au cœur du plus grand lac du département. tendanceouest.com.
  10. Web site: Canoe Polo Championships History, sorted by Year, Class and Ranking.
  11. Web site: The man in the Roche d'Oëtre | Tales from France's smallest, oldest mountain. April 10, 2018.
  12. Web site: " Intérieur à ciel ouvert " - Comité des Parcs et Jardins de France. www.parcsetjardins.fr.
  13. Web site: Jardins du manoir de La Boisnerie - Comité des Parcs et Jardins de France. www.parcsetjardins.fr.
  14. Web site: The Domaine de Pontécoulant. Calvados Tourisme.
  15. Web site: Château de Pontécoulant, Pontécoulant, France - SpottingHistory.com. www.spottinghistory.com.
  16. Web site: Château. www.pop.culture.gouv.fr.
  17. Web site: Parc du château. www.pop.culture.gouv.fr.
  18. Web site: Château. www.pop.culture.gouv.fr.
  19. Web site: Château Ganne. www.pop.culture.gouv.fr.
  20. Web site: Château-Ganne | Norman Connections | Discover Norman History. www.normanconnections.com.
  21. Web site: LES REMPARTS DE CURCY-SUR-ORNE (Calvados). Médiévale... Remparts de Normandie.
  22. Web site: L'église parlante et vivante à visiter ce week-end. www.ouest-france.fr. 15 September 2014 .
  23. Web site: Normandie. Cette église ornaise est un monument à histoires. www.ouest-france.fr. 9 August 2020 .