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Bussy-le-Château (French pronunciation: [bysi l(ə) ʃɑto]) is a commune in the Marne department in the Grand Est region of Northeastern France. In 2018, it had a population of 173. The inhabitants of the commune are known as Bussinais (masculine) and Bussinaises (feminine).[3]

Bussy-le-Château
Commune
Église Saint-Hilaire in Bussy-le-Château
Location of Bussy-le-Château
Bussy-le-Château
Bussy-le-Château
Coordinates: 49°03′51″N 4°32′32″E
CountryFrance
RegionGrand Est
DepartmentMarne
ArrondissementChâlons-en-Champagne
CantonArgonne Suippe et Vesle
IntercommunalityRégion de Suippes
Government
  Mayor (20202026) Jean-Luc Galichet[1]
Area
1
23.93 km2 (9.24 sq mi)
Population
 (Jan. 2019)[2]
175
  Density7.3/km2 (19/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
51097 /51600
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Geography


Bussy-le-Château is located some 15 km (9.3 mi) northeast of Châlons-en-Champagne and 40 km (24.8 mi) southeast of Reims. Access to the commune is by road D79 from Suippes in the north which passes through the commune and the village and continues south to Courtisols. The D66 road comes from Somme-Tourbe in the northeast passing through the village and continuing west to La Cheppe. The D994 forms the southwestern border of the commune as it goes from La Cheppe to Nettancourt. The European route E50 passes through the south of the commune from west to east but has no exit in the commune. There is also a railway line (LGV Est) parallel to the E50 but no station in the commune. The commune consists almost entirely of farmland.[4]


Neighbouring communes and villages



Toponymy


The name Bussy comes from bu (wood) and yd (populated place). It has been known by many names over the course of time:


History


The Deanery of Bussy-le-Château and those of Châlons, Coole, and Vitry-en-Perthois were the four ecclesiastical districts which formed the large Archdeaconry of Chalons.

The deanery of Bussy contained the Parishes of La Cheppe, Coulmier (attached to Mutigny to form La Chaussée-sur-Marne), Coupéville, Courtisols, La Croix-en-Champagne, Dampierre-au-Temple, L'Epine, Le Fresne, Isle-sur-Marne, Juvigny, Marson, Pogny, Recy, Saint-Étienne-au-Temple, Saint-Remy-sur-Bussy, Sarry, Somme-Vesle, Tilloy-et-Bellay, Vésigneul-sur-Marne, and La Veuve.[5]

In the 12th century Bussy-le-Château was in the County of Champagne, one of the 26 castellanies-prévôtés held in fief from the Emperor, the King of France, the Duke of Burgundy, the Abbey of Saint-Denis, the Archbishops of Reims and Sens, and the bishops of Châlons and Langres.

In the 16th and 17th centuries the lordship of Bussy-le-Château as well as the lordships of Reynel, Choiseul, Lafauche, Vavray-le-Grand, Blaise, Vignory, and Sexfontaines were part of the prerogative of the House of Amboise.

The Lordship of Bussy-le-Château was elevated to the rank of a Marquisate by letter in the month of January 1699.[6] It was then under the control of the Arnolet de la Rochefontaine family. The title was confirmed in 1703.

In 1770, Bussy-le-Château was held by the Cappy family.[7]

Bussy-le-Château takes its name from an ancient fort which appears to have been of considerable size.

During the French Revolution, following the decree of the National Convention of 16 October 1793 (25 vendémiaire Year II), which invited communes with names that recalled the memories of the monarchy, feudalism, or superstition, to replace them with other names, the commune changed its name to Bussy-les-Mottes due to five large mounds in the middle of the village which were arranged in a row along the river.[8]

There was a war hospital outside the village during the First World War between the roads leading to Saint-Remy-sur-Bussy and Courtisols. There was also a railway for transport of troops.


Administration


List of successive mayors[9]

FromToName
18351839Jacquet-Létaudin
1890Augustin Prosper Bablot
18911899Louis Félix Oudard
1906Cyrille Sophrone Laloua
19071912Ernest René Gautier
Collard
Georges Notret
1965Albert Musset
19651987Daniel Godard
19872003Hubert Laloua
20032014Jean-Marie Godart
20142020Gilles Gossart
20202026Jean-Luc Galichet

Demographics


In 2017 the commune had 171 inhabitants.

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1793 376    
1800 386+0.38%
1806 370−0.70%
1821 400+0.52%
1831 402+0.05%
1836 400−0.10%
1841 423+1.12%
1846 423+0.00%
1851 418−0.24%
1856 391−1.33%
1861 354−1.97%
1866 354+0.00%
1872 343−0.52%
1876 333−0.74%
1881 323−0.61%
1886 298−1.60%
1891 288−0.68%
1896 298+0.68%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1901 287−0.75%
1906 264−1.66%
1911 262−0.15%
1921 233−1.17%
1926 273+3.22%
1931 241−2.46%
1936 243+0.17%
1946 200−1.93%
1954 209+0.55%
1962 227+1.04%
1968 266+2.68%
1975 223−2.49%
1982 216−0.45%
1990 195−1.27%
1999 178−1.01%
2007 163−1.09%
2012 167+0.49%
2017 171+0.47%
Source: EHESS[10] and INSEE[11]

Economy


Most of the inhabitants of the village derive their income from intensive agriculture (wheat, barley, canola, peas, alfalfa, beets, potatoes, carrots, and, in the past, tobacco, corn, sunflower, lentils...). There are also some cattle. A local vegetable called the Boulette de Bussy (Bussy dumpling),[12] is a variety of turnip known for its finesse and cooked notably at the starred restaurant "Les Crayères" in Reims.

It is possible to stay in Bussy-le-Château in a guesthouse.

There are no shops.


Local culture and heritage



Cultural events and festivals


The Village Festival takes place the weekend after Saint-Luc on 18 October. There are traditionally some fairground rides and the Suippes band interprets a variety of works from classical to contemporary.

A cyclo-cross race "bike and run" has taken place every year since 2009 in May organized by La Pédale Suippase. It has been increasingly successful over time. Its course passes through the village along some tumuli and crosses the river: it may be performed in its entirety almost all year round.


Sites and monuments


The commune has five Tumuli on its territory including three which are relatively intact in a line along the river. Two of the Tumuli are registered as historical monuments.[13][14]

Their names are:[15]

To the east of the tumuli are the remains of an ancient castle.

The Oratory of Saint-Nicolas
The Oratory of Saint-Nicolas

The oldest oratory identified in the Marne is in Bussy-le-Château on the western outskirts of the village. Dedicated to Saint Nicolas, an inscription reads: "to the glory of God restored through the efforts of Jacquet-Létaudin Mayor of Bussy and Bablot-Jacquet his son in 1835".

There was a military cemetery after the First World War with of hundreds of soldiers' graves in the street now called now "Rue du Rouillon". The graves were transferred to Sommepy-Tahure in the 1950s.

The 294th Infantry Regiment made a passage through Bussy-le-Château.

The commune has no shops although in the past there were a butcher shop, a bakery and several cafes. The elementary school, which was located in Bussy-le-Château Town Hall, has been closed since 2005: children go to school in the communal group school in Saint-Remy-sur-Bussy. The football field is now a cultivated field. There were Masses once a week in the church in the 19th century but there have been none since the death of the last parish priest, Father Jean Colmart.


Historical aerial views of Bussy-le-Château



Notable people linked to the commune


The Bussy-d'Amboise family branch died out on 12 May 1626.

The 8 members of the crew of a Stirling III of No. 622 Squadron RAF (code GI-Q), a bomber of the Commonwealth forces, were shot down over the commune on 18 November 1943 while flying to Mannheim (Germany) for a bombing mission. Their bodies have been buried in the cemetery on the north side of the church since 20 November 1943.[22][23]

Bussy-le-Château The Airmen's Graves
Bussy-le-Château The Airmen's Graves

The 8 crew members were:


See also



References


  1. "Répertoire national des élus: les maires". data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises (in French). 2 December 2020.
  2. "Populations légales 2019". The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. 29 December 2021.
  3. Inhabitants of Marne (in French)
  4. Google Maps
  5. Chossenot (S.), Population and Occupation of land in the Deanery of Bussy-le-Château du Ve in the 15th century, Memoir of dominion under the direction of C. Vulliez et J. Lusse, University of Reims, UFR des Lettres et Sciences Humaines, 1998, 2 vol. (in French)
  6. François-Alexandre Aubert de la Chesnaye des Bois, Genealogical Dictionary, heraldry, chronological and historical, containing the origin and current status of the first houses of France, sovereign and major houses of Europe; the names of provinces, cities, lands, ... erected principalities, duchies, marquisates, counties, and viscounties, baronneries; extinct houses that have possessed, those by inheritance, purchase or donation or alliance of sovereign possess today, the noble families of the kingdom and the names and genealogies weapons have not been published by Messrs. D.L.C.D.B., Paris, Duchesne, 1757 (in French)
  7. Henri Gourdon Genouillace (1826-1898), Dictionary of fiefs, manors, castellanies, etc. of ancient France, containing the names of the land and those families who have owned their provincial status, dates of possession, transmission or erection on titled lands, etc., etc., Paris, E.Dentu editor, 1862 (in French)
  8. Mr Calmette, History of remarkable Cities, Towns and Villages in Marne, 1850 (reprinted in 1989 by La Tour Gile)
  9. List of Mayors of France (in French)
  10. Des villages de Cassini aux communes d'aujourd'hui: Commune data sheet Bussy-le-Château, EHESS. (in French)
  11. Population en historique depuis 1968, INSEE
  12. Boulette de Bussy website Archived 2013-04-02 at the Wayback Machine (in French)
  13. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée PA00078603 Tumulus (in French)
  14. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée PA00078602 Tumulus (in French)
  15. Pierre-Hilaire Létaudin Historical study of La Cheppe, Attila's Camp and its surroundings, Châlons-sur-Marne, 1869 (in French)
  16. A. Guillemot, Tales, legends, old customs of Marne: The Massacre of bottles on the "tower" of Bussy-Le-Château (in French)
  17. Catalogue of gentlemen of Champagne. Bailiwick of Chalons-sur-Marne. Minutes of the Special Assembly of the Nobility, 13 March 1789 (in French)
  18. François-Alexandre Aubert de La Chesnaye des Bois, Dictionary of the nobility, containing genealogies, history ...', Volume 3 (in French)
  19. Louis Pierre d'Hozier, General Armorial of France (in French)
  20. Catalogue of gentlemen of Champagne. List of gentlemen who participated in person or by proxy at the Meeting of the Nobility in drafting the list of grievances in the Bailiwick of Vitry and side bailiwicks of St. Menehould Fismes, Saint-Dizier and Epernay. Seneuze, imp. of the King at Chalons, 1789. 6 March 1789 (in French)
  21. Biographie Châlonnaise, collective work (in French)
  22. Inscriptions engraved on the 8 tombstones and their graves.
  23. An article by Hervé Chabaud published in L'Union on 18 November 2003, page 8 and on his blog (in French)



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[de] Bussy-le-Château

Bussy-le-Château ist eine französische Gemeinde mit 175 Einwohnern (Stand 1. Januar 2019) im Département Marne in der Region Grand Est. Sie gehört zum Arrondissement Châlons-en-Champagne und zum Kanton Argonne Suippe et Vesle.
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