When we tell them we’re really heading to Paris for two days and we’re to spend one day in Disneyland they’re both absolutely thrilled! We drive out of Zandvoort with two very happy campers indeed.Īpparently the news did cost a lot of energy because they’re both fast asleep in five minutes. We make a quick stop at the supermarket for some well needed energy drink and when we get back in the car Kev finds two stowaways under the front car seat… It’s Mickey and Minnie!! They tell Floris and Lotte they jumped in the car because they’re going back home, to Disneyland Paris, and Lotte and Floris are welcome to join.įloris starts screaming in delight and Lotte casually says “I don’t believe it”. Kev told them that we were going for a drink at the beach (the luxury of living in Zandvoort) and when we drive off in the other direction they act slightly surprised. The kids have showered and they’re ready to sit in the car in their relax-outfits. When I get home from work on Wednesday Kev has everything set. Nevertheless, we start our journey to Paris full of good courage. That was, how should I put it, pretty much hell on earth! To sum it up the journey looked a bit like this: stopping five times in total to let the kids pee, stopping one time because Lotte (including chair) was covered in poo, catching Lotte’s foot between the car door and taking about eight hours in total to get there in a bunch of snow. The premises of the current town hall Town Hall hosted the third school, gained in 1880 through philanthropic intervention of the mayor at the time, Jules Chartier.We drove to Paris once before, when Lotte was only 1 year old and Floris two. The second school, which also houses the town hall and this just after the Revolution, was installed below the pharmacy, rue Charles de Gaulle. The school exists Chessy since at least 1664 when it was located in the current street Farms. With the push east of the Paris agglomeration, second homes were gradually transformed into primary residences and the slope is highly urbanized. Habitat located on the same hillside sloping down to the Marne is much later, this type of slope is difficult to develop with further long been planted with vines.įrom 60 years and above 70, Chessy became a resort for Parisians who have built on the hillside houses or cottages weekend. Beyond the laundry, urbanization began in the year 1950/1960. It was already the name before 1920, but has existed since at least 1619 under other names. The place of the church are now the Auberge Saint-Nicolas. The only obvious element of sustainable village is the church of Saint-Nicolas, which was rebuilt in 1743. The only concrete unit and recognized in the Middle Ages is the site of eyed peas (XIII - 16th centuries) there were houses with adjoining garden along the main street, welcoming a cemetery burials about 1500 and the late chapel of St. The presence of the homes we now prohibits the knowledge of the history of the construction of the village. The presence of a lord also implies the presence of a stately home and a text from 1583 mentions for the first time a manor, that of Lawrence Bellanger, lord of Pommeuse. In fact, the first mention of a lord Pommeuse back to 1420, it was Robert Courtignon. Moving from the village to the hill is probably justified by the installation of Lords on the platform before the end of the Middle Ages. This route still exists, partially paved: these are the rue Charles de Gaulle and Street Lagny. In the 18th century, the village and the castle grounds were separated by the royal route. About the 11th century, the villagers abandoned the plateau and probably settled on the edge of the hill. The occupation of the plateau Chessy by villagers - farmers - back to La Tène period (protohistoric, circa 450 BCE). In the north, the wooded hillside bordered the village and to the south lay the vast plateau punctuated by three agricultural farm, the park and the castle Chessy. Village Chessy bounded on the north by the valley of the Marne, is located at the crest of the hill.
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