Creation of the Oise department 1790 (≈ 1790)
Integration of Trie-Château in the Oise.
1862
Classification to Historical Monuments
Classification to Historical Monuments 1862 (≈ 1862)
Official protection of the building.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Hôtel de Ville : liste de 1862
Key figures
Information non disponible - No key character identified
Sources insufficient for attribution.
Origin and history
The former Town Hall of Trie-Château has been a listed monument to historical monuments since 1862. Located at 86 Rue Nationale in this municipality of Oise, it embodies the local administrative history. The Oise department, on which Trie-Château depends, was created in 1790 from territories from Ile-de-France and Picardie, integrating areas such as Beauvais and Vexin France. This historical context explains the architectural and cultural diversity of the region, where the influence of the francilians and the picards are mixed.
Trie-Château, served by the line J du Transilien, is a town about 60 km northwest of Paris. The Oise department, crossed by the Oise river, is marked by a varied heritage, ranging from Renaissance castles to Gallo-Roman remains. The former Town Hall, although little documented in the sources, is part of this historical landscape, reflecting the importance of communal institutions in the territorial organization since the French Revolution.
The classification of 1862 underscores the heritage value of this building, probably linked to its central role in local life. At that time, Oise, then in Picardy, was a rapidly changing territory marked by industrialisation and the development of transport, including rail. The Town Hall of Trie-Château, like other monuments in the region, bears witness to this pivotal period between rural tradition and administrative modernization.
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