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Monument to the dead à Champagne-sur-Loue dans le Jura

Jura

Monument to the dead

    4 Chemin des Laminoirs
    39600 Champagne-sur-Loue
Monument aux morts
Monument aux morts
Monument aux morts
Monument aux morts
Crédit photo : .mw-parser-output .commons-creator-table{backgroun - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
20 novembre 1870
Death of Léon Mesny de Boisseaux
1914-1918
Added names of the dead
22 avril 2024
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The monument to the dead, in total, situated departmental 274 and rue du Pont, on Parcel No. 40, appearing in the cadastre section ZA, as delimited in red on the plan annexed to the decree: inscription by order of 22 April 2024

Key figures

Léon Mesny de Boisseaux - Jurassian freeshooter Original tribute to the monument, died in 1870.
Louis Hippolyte Mouchot - Painter Made portraits of Léon Mesny.

Origin and history

The monument to the dead of Champagne-sur-Loue comes from the tribute paid to Léon Mesny de Boisseaux, a young franc-tireur du Jura killed in 1870 during the Franco-German war. His family had this monument erected on his native property, marking his memory with a pyramidal structure in rocks, symbolizing fighting and mourning. pictorial works, such as Louis Hippolyte Mouchot's paintings, completed this tribute, while a statue and a stele were installed in Dole and Nuits-Saint-Georges.

After World War I, the family offered the monument to the commune, where the names of the four inhabitants died between 1914 and 1918. Transferred to its current location, it became the monument to the village's official dead, also commemorating the victims of 1939-1945. Its architecture, evoking a stylized rock cluster, incorporates military and funeral symbols. Ranked a historic monument in April 2024, it is part of a set of 26 franc-comtois monuments protected in the same year by the DRAC.

The monument is distinguished by its dual heritage: family memorial became a place of collective remembrance. Its recent inscription underscores its heritage value, both artistic and historical, linked to the conflicts of the 19th and 20th centuries. Today, located on departmental 274, it remains communal property and accessible to the public, testifying to the local commitment to preserve the memory of the Jurassian soldiers.

External links