Banneville-la-Campagne is a small rural town bisected by Highway of Normandy. It is at the limit of the Pays d'Auge and the plain of Caen. His name is of Scandinavian origin: Banneville: Barni the field and the suffix "campaign" to "plain". It belongs to the canton of Troarn.
From Banneville prewar, there are some isolated farms and two castles restored including the Banneville which retains the end of the park, the monumental gate of the Abbey Troarn.
Dedicated to the Assumption of the Virgin, the church Banneville-la-Campagne, largely rebuilt in the 19th century on older foundations, was a heap of rubble. The two superb saves clearing statues of the late 17th century or early 18th: a St. Martin and Virgin and Child mutilated. Both statues will be relocated to the place of honor in the modern church rebuilt in 1960/1961.