Start of German occupation 28 août 1914 (≈ 1914)
Arrival of troops, flight of inhabitants.
février 1917
Construction of the Hindenburg line
Construction of the Hindenburg line février 1917 (≈ 1917)
German decision of rear fortification.
10 mars 1917
Systematic destruction of the village
Systematic destruction of the village 10 mars 1917 (≈ 1917)
Houses and church dynamited by the Germans.
19 septembre 1918
Permanent release of Villeret
Permanent release of Villeret 19 septembre 1918 (≈ 1918)
German occupation ended.
27 octobre 1920
Attribution of the Cross of War
Attribution of the Cross of War 27 octobre 1920 (≈ 1920)
Recognition of suffering.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Général Hindenburg - German Commander
Ordered the Hindenburg line and destroyed.
Origin and history
The church Notre-Dame-de-l'Immaculée-Conception de Villeret is a religious monument located in the commune of Villeret, in the department of Aisne, in the Hauts-de-France region. This rural village, marked by a dominant agricultural occupation (92.6% of arable land in 2018), experienced a tragic history during the First World War, especially because of its proximity to the Hindenburg Line, a German defence line built in 1917.
During the war, Villeret was occupied by the Germans as early as August 1914, suffering requisitions, forced labour and systematic destruction. In March 1917, the village was completely razed by German troops before their withdrawal: houses, church, town hall and schools were dynamized, and trees sawn. Villeret was finally released in September 1918, once populated by 909 inhabitants in 1911, but by 1921 there were more than 521. The reconstruction lasted more than ten years, and the commune received the War Cross 1914-1918 in 1920 for the suffering endured.
The toponym Villeret has its origin in the vilaret, diminutive lower Latin villare ("rural estate"), evoking a small hamlet of 10 to 12 fires. The village, now a member of the community of communes of the Pays du Vermandois, remains marked in the past, with a monument to the dead paying tribute to the 33 local soldiers who fell during the conflict. The present church, rebuilt after the war, bears witness to this community resilience.
In terms of climate, Villeret is subject to a degraded ocean climate, with cold winters (average of 3 °C) and regular precipitation (753 mm/year). This environmental context, coupled with its tormented history, makes it a symbolic place of post-First War reconstruction in northern France.
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