Auquainville (French pronunciation:[okɛ̃vil](listen)) is a former commune in the Calvados department in the Normandyregion of north-western France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Livarot-Pays-d'Auge.[2]
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1km2 (0.386sqmi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
The inhabitants of the commune are known as Auquainvillais or Auquainvillaises.[3]
Geography
Auquainville is located some 10km south of Lisieux and 13km west by north-west of Orbec. Access to the commune is by the D149 road which comes from Saint-Martin-de-Mailloc in the north-east and passes south through the commune and the village continuing to Livarot in the south-west. The D64 road comes from Saint-Martin-de-la-Lieue in the north and passes south through the east of the commune to Fervaques. The D135B branches east off the D64 in the commune and joins the D135 just east of the commune. Apart from the village, there are the hamlets of La Blondeliere in the west with Le Mollants and Le Maubuisson in the east. The commune is mixed forest and farmland with a particularly large forest to the west of the village (the Bois des Grandes Ventes).[4]
The Touques river passes through the commune from south to north just east of the village and continues north to join the ocean at Trouville-sur-Mer. The Ruisseau de la Marette rises in the commune and flows east into the Touques.[4]
The commune has several religious buildings and structures that are registered as historical monuments:
The Church of Saint Aubin (15th century).[11] The church was decommissioned when Saint-Aubin-sur-Auquainville was incorporated into the commune of Auquainville in 1831 and was then used as a burial chapel by the Custine family. The choir with a flat apse indicates the building is from the late Middle Ages. It has a single nave and tower sitting on the western gable. The windows and door have without doubt been re-engineered in the 18th century. Inside, the building has retained all of its former layout. The Church contains many items that are registered as historical objects:
The Main Altar, seating, Tabernacle urn, Retable, an Altar Painting: the Agony of Christ in the garden of olives, and 2 Statues of St. Aubin and St. Sebastian (1787)[12]
A Secondary Altar, seating, Retables, and 2 Statues of the Virgin and St. Quentin (18th century)[13]
The Church of Notre-Dame (15th century).[14] The Church contains many items that are registered as historical objects:
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