Saint-André-sur-Orne
Saint-André-sur-Orne is a village in the Calvados department in the Normandy region in northwestern France.
Geography
The commune is made up of the following collection of villages and hamlets, Étavaux and Saint-André-sur-Orne.The River Orne flows through the commune.
History
The village's history is closely linked to the Saint Stephen abbey "Abbaye Saint-Étienne-de-Fontenay" founded on his land of Fontenay by Raoul Tesson around 1047 under the patronage of Duke William of Normandy and which survived until the French Revolution at the end of the 18th century. Most of the abbey was destroyed at the beginning of the 19th century, but there still remains a 13th-century building along the Orne river, and the abbot's more "modern" house rebuilt at the beginning of the 18th century.The village witnessed the expulsion of many schoolchildren from the "Maison du Clos" by the Nazi army during World War II, but the marching children were then rescued by Allied soldiers. The village was finally liberated in July 1944 by Canadian soldiers, many of whom died in this fierce battle, hence the street names of "Royal Black Watch" and the village's main street "Rue des Canadiens". Their bodies are buried in the Bretteville-sur-Laize Canadian War Cemetery in the nearby village of Cintheaux.
Points of Interest
National heritage sites
The commune has three sites listed as a Monument historique.- Église Saint André - a thirteenth centaury church registered as a monument in 1937.
- Chapelle Saint Orthaire d'Etavaux - a twelfth centaury church registered as a monument in 1927.
- Ancienne abbaye Saint-Etienne-de-Fontenay - Former twelfth centaury Abbey which was registered as a monument in 1945.
Twin towns – sister cities
Saint-André-sur-Orne is twinned with:- Stockstadt am Main, Germany, since 1993.