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Church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Versigny dans l'Aisne

Aisne

Church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Versigny

    4 Rue de l'Église
    02800 Versigny

Timeline

Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1000
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
987
First certificate of name
1674
Name of parish
XVIe siècle (fin)
Lordship of Le Josne
1878-1959
Dercy-Mortiers railway line
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Famille Le Josne - Lords of Versigny Possessors of the seigneury at the end of the sixteenth century.

Origin and history

The church Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Versigny is located in the commune of Versigny, in the department of Aisne, in the region Hauts-de-France. This rural village, marked by a majority agricultural occupation (74% of the land in 2018), is part of a territory historically linked to local seigneuries, as attested to before the French Revolution. The name of the parish, Saint-Jean-Baptiste-de-Versigny, appeared in 1674, reflecting its religious and administrative anchor in the region.

Before the Revolution, Versigny housed a seigneury, which was held at the end of the 16th century by a member of the Le Josne family, potentially linked to Le Josne de Contay. This local nobility played a central role in the social and economic organization of the territory, where agriculture (arable land, meadows) and natural resources (risseaux like Saint-Lambert) structured daily life. The church, as a place of worship and assembly, embodied this link between seigneurial power and the peasant community.

In the 19th century, Versigny became the terminus of the Dercy-Mortiers railway line at Versigny (1878-1959), facilitating the exchange of goods (betteraves, limestone) and passengers. This infrastructure, which has now disappeared, illustrates the evolution of local dynamics from a traditional rural economy to gradual integration into regional networks. The church, witness to these transformations, remains an identity marker of the municipality, now attached to the conurbation Chauny-Tergnier-La Fère.

The territory, marked by altered ocean climate and dispersed habitat, preserves traces of its past through historical maps (Cassini, General Staff) and toponymic studies. The name Versigny, attested since Verciniacum (987), evokes a Gallo-Roman or medieval origin, while land use, between forests (17.8%) and urbanized areas (6.3%), reflects a balance between rural heritage and modernity.

External links