The church of Saint-Jean-de-Livet is a typical example of a modest edifice from the first half of the 11th century, with a single nave extended by a flat chevet choir, and with no sculpted decor. Subsequently it received a tower rising above the east façade and a porch protecting the Romanesque portal of the south wall of the nave. The wall bonding presents small rubble stones arranged very regularly, as in the constructions of antiquity, and fish bone patterns. In the upper part of the chevet wall, small triangular openings remain in the tradition of the early middle ages. Another example of this system of openings can be seen at Saint-Martin-de-la-Lieue. Bibliography
- Baylé, Maylis (dir.). - Larchitecture normande
au Moyen-Age, Editions Charles Corlet : Condé-sur-Noireau, Presses
universitaires de Caen : Caen, 1997, 2 vol., T. 2, p. 18-19
- Caumont, Arcisse (de). - Statistique monumentale du Calvados, Hardel,
Caen, 1859, 4 vol., T. III, p. 317 à 319
- Maneuvrier, Chr. - L'utilisation de la brique dans les premiers édifices
romans du Pays d'Auge : matériau médiéval ou récupération ?, Histoire et
tradition populaires du canton de Saint-Pierre-sur-Dives, Foyer rural du
Billot, 38, juin 1992, p. 31-36