First certificate of name 1681 (≈ 1681)
Mention of *Roeuilly-Sauvigny* in the archives.
1782
Registered alternative name
Registered alternative name 1782 (≈ 1782)
Called *Reuilly-en-Champagne* in a document.
2017
Inter-municipal integration
Inter-municipal integration 2017 (≈ 2017)
Joined the community of agglomeration of Château-Thierry.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character cited
Sources do not mention any related historical actors.
Origin and history
The church Saint-Blaise de Reuilly-Sauvigny is located in the commune of the same name, in the department of Aisne, in the Hauts-de-France region. This rural village, with its scattered habitat, is located on the hillside in a loop of the Marne, 11.4 km from Château-Thierry and 91 km from Paris. The town, crossed by two gués on the Marne, played a strategic role during the last two world wars, suffering significant damage. The territory, mostly wooded (67.6% of forests in 2018), is also marked by agricultural occupation and a history related to river crossings.
Reuilly-Sauvigny, certified in the form of Rœuilly-Sauvigny (1681) or Reuilly-en-Champagne (1782), includes the former hamlet of Sauvigny. The commune, a member of the community of agglomeration of Château-Thierry since 2017, is administratively dependent on the district of the same name. Its climate, of an altered oceanic type, and its forest and agricultural soil reflect the characteristics of the north-east of the Paris basin. Although the church itself is not detailed in the sources, its existence is part of this local historical and geographical context, where religious buildings traditionally served as community and spiritual landmarks.
La Marne, which borders the commune, has shaped its development, with gués used as strategic crossing points. These elements, combined with the proximity of Château-Thierry and the rurality of the territory, suggest a history linked to exchanges, conflicts and peasant life. Censuses show a population of 225 in 2023, growing since 2017, in a moderate attraction area. Historical maps, such as that of Cassini (18th century), allow to trace the evolution of the territory, but the precise architectural or historical details of the church of Saint-Blaise remain undocumented in the available sources.
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