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Église Saint-Martin de Jeancourt dans l'Aisne

Aisne

Église Saint-Martin de Jeancourt

    13 Rue Berdeaux
    02490 Jeancourt
Markus3 (Marc ROUSSEL)

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1658
First written certificate
1685-1691
Clandestine Protestant conversion
28 août 1914
First skirmish
mars 1917
Total destruction of the village
31 mars 1917
British Liberation
1920
Decoration of the Cross of War
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Gardien Givry - Itinerant Protestant preacher Converts inhabitants after 1685 to the place called *Box in Cailloux*.
Lieutenant de Martimpré - French officer Killed on August 28, 1914.
Brigadier Courthial de Lassuchette - French military Killed in 1914 during the first fighting.

Origin and history

The Saint-Martin de Jeancourt Church is a religious monument located in the rural commune of Jeancourt, in the department of Aisne (Hauts-de-France). Although its initial construction period was not specified in the sources, its existence was attested in the 17th century under the name of Parish of Saint-Martin-de-Jehancourt (1658). The village, crossed by departmental roads and surrounded by agricultural land, has long been a modest place of life, marked by a clandestine Protestant occupation after the revocation of the edict of Nantes (1685).

During the First World War, Jeancourt was a strategic village close to the front of Peronne. In March 1917, before their withdrawal on the Hindenburg line, German troops systematically dynamited the church, the Protestant temple, the town hall and all houses. Only the cemetery, with two intact chapels, escaped destruction. The village, emptied of its 600 inhabitants deported to Saint-Quentin or Belgium, became an area of fighting until September 1918. After the Armistice, the reconstruction lasted more than ten years, reducing the population to 300 in 1921.

The commune, decorated with the War Cross 1914-1918 in 1920, now houses a military cemetery with 660 soldiers (including 492 British and 168 German) fallen in local battles. The present church, rebuilt after 1918, bears witness to this painful story, as does the death monument inaugurated in 1923, paying tribute to the 16 Jeancourt soldiers who died for France. The village, now rural and sparsely populated (251 inhabitants in 2023), also preserves the traces of a lost windmill (XVIII century) and a calvary depicted on the old maps.

Before the war, Jeancourt was a typical agricultural village in Vermandois, with activities focused on cereal crops (94% of the land in 2018). Its limestone basement and its position in a valley made it moderately exposed to the weather, with a degraded ocean climate. Community life was punctuated by the work of the fields, as evidenced by the German decrees of 1915 imposing 16-hour tillage days under penalty of imprisonment. After 1918, the disappearance of local shops in the 1970s and the demographic decline frozen Jeancourt in a memory of a martyr village, today preserved by its reconstructed heritage and its military necropolises.

External links