Historical monument classification 20 septembre 1922 (≈ 1922)
Official building protection
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Church: Order of 20 September 1922
Origin and history
The church Saint-Brice de Sergy, located in the department of Aisne in the Hauts-de-France region, is a religious building whose construction takes place mainly in the 12th and 13th centuries. It underwent significant changes in the 16th century, reflecting the architectural changes and liturgical needs of the time. Its architecture thus combines Romanesque and Gothic elements, characteristic of late medieval periods and the Renaissance.
Classified as historical monuments by decree of 20 September 1922, the church Saint-Brice bears witness to the importance of religious heritage in the French countryside. At that time, parish churches such as Sergy served as a spiritual, social and sometimes administrative centre for local communities. Their preservation in the 20th century illustrates the desire to protect a cultural and architectural heritage threatened by conflict or abandonment.
Available sources, including Wikipedia and Monumentum, confirm its status as communal property and its complete classification (whole church). Although little documented about its artistic specificities or sponsors, this church embodies the central role of religious buildings in medieval and modern territorial organization. Its precise address, 9 Rue de l'Eglise in Sergy, allows to locate it in a village marked by Picardy history, now integrated with the Hauts-de-France.
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