Cherrueix

Cherrueix (French pronunciation: [ʃɛʁɥɛ]; Breton: Kerruer; Gallo: Chaéruér) is a commune in the Ille-et-Vilaine department of Brittany in northwestern France.

Bordered by the Channel, this village of 1150 inhabitants, lies at the heart of the Breton part of the Bay of Mont Saint-Michel, twenty kilometers from Saint-Malo and 8 km from Dol-de-Bretagne (TGV to Paris).

These buildings have been abandoned over time and have virtually disappeared, replaced by stone walls (including granite) and the slate roof.

With the 2005 arrival of the very speed train (TGV) Paris ↔ Dol-de-Bretagne Saint-Malo, the town is booming, the population is constantly growing.

At 4.3 km from Cherrueix the ancient chapel of St. Anne (St. Broladre) marks the eastern boundary of the former dune which was built early in the Middle Ages this road.

Dyke dating from the thirteenth century and extending over 20 km long St. Méloir des Ondes (peak Richeux castle) to the chapel of St. Anne.

Statue of the Virgin erected in 1888 on the embankment facing the beach and the Channel at low tide withdrew to 7 km.

Armed with permissions of the dikes and marshes, and the agreement of Cardinal Place Charles de Rennes to give the name of "Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde" at the future monument, the statue has been erected to protect the bay, fishermen, sailors and farmers.

It consists of a nave and a Romanesque gothic heart House seafront building formerly used as a public school for girls and restored in 2005.

Under pressure from activists of secularism, the cross which surmounted was sawed, although the monument with an initial, had been blessed, and that the vast majority of the Dead for France this was a Christian village in Brittany.

It is a Louis XIII building with gerbières with pediments and cornices rounded modillonnées, his door is surmounted by an arch (dated 1619).

Train Marin can explore in light of the tidal bench Hermel and fisheries wood dating from the twelfth century.