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Chantilly, Oise

Chantilly (/ʃænˈtɪli/ shan-TIL-ee,[3] French: [ʃɑ̃tiji] ; Picard: Cantily) is a commune in the Oise department in the Valley of the Nonette in the Hauts-de-France region of Northern France. Surrounded by Chantilly Forest, the town of 10,863 inhabitants (2017) falls within the metropolitan area of Paris. It lies 38.4 km (23.9 miles) north-northeast of the centre of Paris and together with six neighbouring communes forms an urban area of 37,254 inhabitants (2018).

Chantilly
The Château de Chantilly, completed in 1882, houses the Institut de France's Musée Condé.
Location of Chantilly
Chantilly
Chantilly
Coordinates: 49°12′00″N 2°28′00″E / 49.2000°N 2.4667°E / 49.2000; 2.4667
CountryFrance
RegionHauts-de-France
DepartmentOise
ArrondissementSenlis
CantonChantilly
IntercommunalityAire Cantilienne
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2026) Isabelle Wojtowiez[1]
Area
1
16.19 km2 (6.25 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[2]
10,652
 • Density660/km2 (1,700/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
60141 /60500
Elevation35–112 m (115–367 ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Intimately tied to the House of Montmorency in the 15th to 17th centuries, the Château de Chantilly was home to the Princes of Condé, cousins of the Kings of France, from the 17th to the 19th centuries. It now houses the Musée Condé. Chantilly is also known for its horse racing track, Chantilly Racecourse, where prestigious races are held for the Prix du Jockey Club and Prix de Diane. Chantilly and the surrounding communities are home to the largest racehorse-training community in France.

Chantilly is also home to the Living Museum of the Horse, with stables built by the Princes of Condé. It is considered one of the more important tourist destinations in the Paris area. Chantilly gave its name to Chantilly cream and to Chantilly lace. The city was the base for the England national football team during the Euro 2016 Championship.

Geography edit

Chantilly lies in the Parisian basin, at the south end of the region of Hauts-de-France and the north end of the Paris metropolitan area. It belongs to the historic region of Valois. Chantilly lies 39 km (25 miles) southwest of Beauvais, 79 km (50 miles) south of Amiens and 38 km (24 miles) north of Paris.

Saint-Maximin lies to the north, Vineuil-Saint-Firmin to the northeast, Avilly-Saint-Léonard to the east, Pontarmé and Orry-la-Ville to the south-east, Coye-la-Forêt to the south, Lamorlaye to the southwest and Gouvieux to the west.

Chantilly is the centre of an urban area that includes the communes of Avilly-Saint-Léonard, Boran-sur-Oise, Coye-la-Forêt, Gouvieux, Lamorlaye and Vineuil-Saint-Firmin. It is the third-largest urban area in the Oise and the seventh-largest in Hauts-de-France. It has no large businesses or heavy industry and 40% of the population works in Île-de-France.

Topography edit

 
Map of Chantilly

Chantilly straddles the junction of the Paris Basin and the western County of Valois, of which the Nonette River is a boundary. The site of the town was originally a clearing or meadowland, sometimes called a lawn or pelouse, which is mostly occupied today by the racecourse. The remaining open space between the town and the racecourse is always referred to as the "little lawn". The highest point in the area, 112 meters (378'), is at Bois Lorris, in Lamorlaye. The lowest elevation is 35 metres (115'), at the Canardière on the banks of the Nonette in Gouvieux.

The commune sits on a Lutetian sedimentary limestone plateau covered by Chantilly Forest. Sand created by wind and erosion covers this chalky plateau.

This stone has also been used for building in parts of the region, and still is today in the adjoining commune of Saint-Maximin. It was also used for building in Chantilly itself during the 18th century, when a quarry on the current site of the racecourse produced stone for the court officials' housing and the stables. In the following century the quarry was used to grow mushrooms, then as an air raid shelter during World War II. It now belongs to the Chantilly Estate and is periodically open to the public.[4]

Another geological feature is alluvial accumulations in the river valleys, which have allowed, in the case of the Nonette, the development of community gardens in the locality known as the Canardière.

Hydrology and water supply edit

 
The Canardière on the Nonette
 
Canal of the Machine

The town is bounded at its southern edge by the Thève, a 33 km (20 mile) long tributary of the Oise River. At this point that valley contains the Commelles ponds, created in the 13th century by the monks of Chaalis Abbey to stock fish.

The river Nonette runs through the town itself. This 44 km (27 mile) long river is also part of the watershed of the Oise and is channeled into canals throughout the municipality. In fact, the creation of the château gardens by André Le Nôtre required the complete transformation of the waterway starting in 1663. The riverbed was moved a hundred meters (yards) north to create the 2.5 km (1½ mile) long Grand Canal that runs in front of the château. The old riverbed became the 800 metre (½ mile) long Canal Saint-Jean, named after a 16th-century chapel demolished when the gardens were created. The Canardière, beneath the actual viaduct, was channeled and cleaned up at this time also.

The Canal de la Machine, perpendicular to the other two and nearly 300 meters (yards) long, brought water to the Pavilon du Manse, which fed it to the garden ponds and waterfalls in the western gardens, since disappeared, sending it to a reservoir once located on the lawn. Part of this reservoir still exists near the racecourse, but it no longer contains water. Some of this hydrologic work was used to feed factories in the valley. The gardens that remain were watered by a completely different system based on an aqueduct coming from the area around Senlis.

 
The Château de Chantilly seen from the road north of town

In the 18th century a mineral water source was discovered in the valley and a garden pavilion was built between 1725 and 1728 to allow the public to come drink from it. This was a separate source from the source of ferruginous water, called Chantilly water, discovered at La Chausée in Gouvieux, and bottled and carbonated there from 1882 into the 20th century.

Also in the 18th century, a supply of drinking water was created by diverting water from the reservoir. In 1823, the last prince of Condé had eighteen fountains installed for the use of residents. In 1895 these were replaced with a supply from a water treatment plant in the neighboring village of Lamorlaye. This brought in water from Chantilly, Lamorlaye and Boran-sur-Oise then distributed the treated water through two water towers on the Mont de Pô in Gouvieux. This water supply has been managed by the private company Lyonnaise des eaux since 1928.

The sewer system was installed in 1878, but initially limited to the area around rue d'Aumale, the Condé Hospice and the rue de Paris, now known as the avenue du Maréchal Joffre. It was extended to the entire town in 1910 through a state subsidy financed by a tax on racetrack bets. A sewage treatment plant was built in 1969 at La Canardière, then moved to Gouvieux in 2006. This 22 km (14 mile) network is administered by a regional agency, the syndicat intercommunal pour le traitement des eaux de la vallée de la Nonette (SICTEUV), which covers Apremont, Avilly-Saint-Léonard, Chantilly, Gouvieux et Vineuil-Saint-Firmin.

History edit

Before the city edit

 
Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry, February, Musée Condé

No traces of habitation from the prehistoric or Iron Age eras have ever been found in Chantilly. A Roman-era grave site was however found on the banks of the Nonette, and Gallo-Roman roads have been discovered in Chantilly Forest. Merovingian tombs from the seventh century were found in the 17th and 19th centuries not far from the Faisanderie.[5]

Around 1223 Guy IV of Senlis agreed with the prior of Saint-Leu-d'Esserent that first referred to Terra cantiliaci. He was the royal grand bouteiller, a hereditary position in charge of the king's vineyards, and became the first lord of Chantilly, which at the time was little more than a rock in the middle of a swampy area. A strong house was mentioned in the area in a 1227 document. In 1282 an act of the Parliament of Paris mentions Chantilly Forest.[6] A 1358 document mentions the destruction of the château in the Grande Jacquerie. It was rebuilt by Pierre d'Orgemont and completed in 1394. During the Hundred Years' War Anglo-Burgundian forces laid siege to the château and Jacqueline de Paynel, widow of Pierre II d'Orgemont, who died at the battle of Agincourt, as well as of Jean de Fayel, was forced to surrender it. In return, the lives of those in the château were spared, but the surrounding villages were laid to waste.[7]

The city began as just a few hamlets scattered outside the château. At the beginning of the 16th century, there were four:

  • Les Grandes Fontaines, near the foot of the current rue des Fontaines,
  • Les Petites Fontaines, also called Normandie, the foot of the current quai de la Canardière and rue de la Machine,
  • Les Aigles, near today's racetrack, which owes its name to the labourers who lived there in the late Middle Ages. It disappeared completely during the French Wars of Religion.
  • Quinquempoix, the largest and closest to the château.[8]
 
The Hôtel de Beauvais, built in 1539, is the oldest building in Chantilly today.

In this period, Quinquempoix began to see an extension of the château's functions. It was home to a chapel devoted to Saint Germain mentioned as early as 1219, which disappeared in the 17th century with the extension of the château's gardens. Several houses were built in Quinquempoix to accommodate the prince's court officials. Also, the hôtel de Beauvais, built in 1539, lodged the master of the hunt of constable (connétable) Anne de Montmorency. The hôtel de Quinquempoix, built around 1553, housed the constable's equerry.[9]

In 1515, Anne's father, Guillaume de Montmorency, had obtained a papal bull that gave him the right to have mass said and all the sacraments performed in the chapel of the château, which was one of the first steps toward autonomy from the surrounding parishes.[10]

New parish to modern times edit

In 1673, Louis II de Bourbon, the Prince of Condé known as the "Grand Condé", built a new road called rue Gouvieux, which is now the rue du Connétable. The land ceded by the château on both sides of this road formed the nucleus of the new town, as guesthouses, workshops for the artisans of the château, and lodgings for servants sprang up. This embryonic town was divided between the parish of Gouvieux in the diocese of Beauvais and the parish of Saint-Léonard in the diocese of Senlis.

 
The Château de Chantilly in the 18th century, after the work done by the Condés. Gouache by Jean-Baptiste Lallement in the Musée Condé.

Louis expressed a wish in his will for a parish church near the château. Henri Jules de Bourbon-Condé fulfilled his father's wish in 1692 by building the church of Notre-Dame and creating a new parish under the Bishop of Senlis, superseding all existing parishes. Chantilly was thus established as autonomous.

 
The Great Stables

His grandson, Louis Henri, Duke of Bourbon, can be called the founder of the city, since he drew up the first city plans. He brought planning to the town design and renamed the rue Gouvieux the Grande Rue. After he built the Great Stables in 1721, he created a development in 1727 and sold lots for housing to court officials, holders of hereditary positions at the court of the Condés. The architectural standards for this housing were drawn by Jean Aubert, architect of the Great Stables. This housing was built between 1730 and 1733. In 1723, the Hospice de la Charité was built at the end of the Grande Rue.

In the second half of the 18th century the princes furthered economic activity. Lace had been produced in the town since the 17th century but now reached its apogee. Porcelain manufacture began in 1726 and was established in the rue de la Machine in 1730. Industrial buildings were built in 1780 at the end of the Grand Canal, to take advantage of the power provided by the waterfall.

The beginnings of the commune edit

 
Chantilly Town Hall

During the French Revolution, Chantilly became a commune whose which boundaries matched those of the parish. The first mayor was the administrator of the estate, André-Joseph Antheaume de Surval. The other city council members were recruited from among the château officials. The Condés were among the first to flee abroad, just days after the fall of the Bastille, on 17 July 1789. The estate was sequestered on 13 June 1792 following the law on émigrés and subsequently subdivided and sold.[11]

 
Potager des Princes, or kitchen garden of the Princes

The first section was sold between 1793 and 1795 – the old kitchen garden, the water garden and the last land available along today's rue du Connétable and around the petite pelouse, as well as the town houses that belonged to the Prince. Much of the land in this first section never came back to the estate. The rest of the land was divided into lots in 1798 and sold over time.[12]

When the Reign of Terror began, the mayor was run out, on 15 August 1793; he was replaced by a Jacobin. The château was transformed into a prison from 1793 to 1794, designated for suspects from the Department of Oise. Sold as a national asset in 1799, the chateau was transformed into a stone quarry by a pair of entrepreneurs. Only the "little château" was preserved. The Great Stables were requisitioned by the army and used in turn by the 11th mounted horse regiment [fr], the 1er dragons or 1st Dragoons from 1803 to 1806 then the 1er régiment de chevau-légers lanciers polonais, or 1st Light Artillery Polish Lancers, from 1808 to 1814.[13]

 
Great Stables at Chantilly Racecourse

A number of industrialists took advantage of the sale of Condé assets to further develop their business activities. In 1792, the porcelain manufacturing enterprise turned its hand to ceramics under the hand of its new English owner, Christophe Potter. A copper laminating factory was established in the industrial buildings on the canal in 1801, and François Richard-Lenoir [fr] opened a mill in 1807. It employed as many as 600 people and brought prosperity back to the commune. Using the new English techniques, it diversified in cloth, particularly in calico manufacture and laundering. It began to decline in 1814 then lost its monopoly and failed in 1822.

In 1815, prince Louis Joseph, Prince of Condé came back to the area for good. He retrieved part of his family's former estate and bought back the rest. His son, Louis VI Henri [fr], had fountains installed in 1823 as well as many of the street lamps in 1827.

Thomas Muir connection edit

 
Thomas Muir

The Scottish political reformer Thomas Muir had been banished to Botany Bay for 14 years for the crime of sedition in 1793. He managed to escape having only spent 13 months there. An adventurous journey followed that eventually brought Muir as a citizen of France to Paris.

Muir became in time the principal intermediary between the French Directory and the various republican refugees in Paris. He was aware that his movements were under scrutiny by British Prime Minister William Pitt's agents. In his last known communication with the Directory, in October 1798, he requested permission to leave Paris for somewhere less conspicuous, where his crucial negotiations with the Scottish emissaries could be conducted in safety.

Sometime in the middle of November 1798, Muir moved incognito to Chantilly. On 26 January 1799, he died there, suddenly and alone, with only a small child for company. So tight had his security been that not even local officials knew of his presence or identity. No identifying documents or papers were found on his person and his name was discovered only when the postman remembered delivering newspapers to him addressed to 'Citoyen Thomas Muir'. Several days later, when the news of Muir's death reached Paris, a brief obituary notice was inserted in Le Moniteur Universel saying that he had died from a recurrence of his old wounds.

A 19th-century vacation and leisure destination edit

Chantilly was also in the 19th century a playground for aristocrats and artists, as well as home to an English community with ties to horse racing. The first horse races were run in 1834 on the lawn area known as the pelouse, and the 1840s saw an influx of bettors of all social classes, especially from Paris. The success of the horse races was primarily due to the opening of the train station in 1859. Later, a public station allowed the arrival of up to 20,000 bettors and visitors on race days. A track and permanent seating were gradually added to form the racecourse in use today. Attendance records began to be kept just before World War I; 40,000 people attended the prix du Jockey Club in 1912.[14]

During the Franco-Prussian War, Chantilly was occupied by the Prussian army for almost a year. The Grand Duke of Mecklenburg, head of the 18th Army Corps, occupied the chateau along with his general staff. His troops requisitioned the Great Stables, the racecourse stables, which had been evacuated, and some privately owned residences as well.[15]

A racing economy grew up around the racecourse, with many stables devoted to training thoroughbred horses. Urban development grew up around these racing activities with new neighbourhoods such as the Bois Saint-Denis exclusively devoted to the activity. There were two trainers and seventeen hands in the 1846 and thirty trainers and 309 nands in 1896.[16] Many in the racing community were British—76% of the jockeys, lads and trainers in 1911—and the British were such a presence in the area that an Anglican chapel was built around 1870.[17]

At the same time, Chantilly was becoming a vacation destination with many aristocrats, members of the haute bourgeoisie and artists moving to the area and building villas and chateaux in the surrounding communes, such as the Rothschild family in Gouvieux, for example. Luxury hotels were also built, such as the Hôtel du Grand Condé in 1908.[18] Henri d'Orléans, Duke of Aumale, last lord of the town, encouraged the development of the racecourse and of the town as well as the arrival of the English.

 
Attack on the Chantilly branch of the Société Générale by the Bonnot Gang of criminal anarchists, as depicted in the Petit Journal.

Between 1876 and 1882, the Duke had the château rebuilt and used it to house one of the most beautiful art collections of the time. By receiving high society in his palace, such as Empress Elizabeth of Austria, known as Sissi, and the Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovitch of Russia, he contributed to the growth of the town.[19] When the château was opened to the public in 1898 after it was willed to the Institute of France, it drew even more tourists to the town—more than 100,000 in the first six months.[20]

Naturally such a profusion of wealth also provoked some greed. On the morning of 25 March 1912, the Bonnot Gang robbed the Société Générale de Chantilly and killed two employees before they fled. This was soon before they broke up and Jules Bonnot died in a shootout with police. The groups was notorious for using an automobile to get away and for the coverage provoked by a Jules Bonnot's appearance, brandishing a Browning automatic, at the office of Le Petit Journal to complain about its coverage of their activities.

Chantilly in World War I edit

The German Army entered Chantilly on 3 September 1914 but did not stay, leaving the next day. The château was occupied but there was no real destruction, unlike the neighboring towns of Creil and Senlis, Oise, where there were fires and considerable destruction. French soldiers did not come back until 9 September. After the First Battle of the Marne, General Joseph Joffre installed his headquarters in Chantilly because of the easy access it offered to Paris by rail. The Grand Quartier-Général, or HQ, took over the hôtel du Grand Condé on 29 November 1914 with 450 officers and 800 clerks and soldiers. Joffre for his part lodged at the Villa Poiret about a hundred yards away.[21][22]

Joffre held the conference of Chantilly from 6 to 8 December 1915 to makes battle plans with his Allied counterparts and to coordinate military offensives for 1916.[23] General Headquarters moved to Beauvais in December 1916, and Chantilly became home to hospitals for soldiers wounded on the front, one in the hôtel Lovenjou, the other in the Egler Pavilion. One of the three camouflage workshops of the French First Engineers Regiment opened in 1917 in custom-built barracks on the petite pelouse near the racetrack. Up to 1200 women were hired, as well as 200 German prisoners of war and 200 workers from Annam in French Indo-China (then a French protectorate). They painted canvases which the army used to mask artillery and troop movements from view.[24]

The town grew in 1928 with the annexation of the Bois Saint-Denis from Gouvieux. In 1930 a monument was put up to Maréchal Joffre on the avenue which now bears his name.

World War II edit

The Wehrmacht entered the city on 13 September 1940, and occupied it. They used the Great Stables as a veterinary hospital for the horses they brought in from Germany, by some estimates the city was home to as many as 400 German horses during the war. The military command took over the hôtel du Grand Condé. Following the assassination of a collaborator, the parish priest, Abbot Charpentier, who authored a 1943 anti-Nazi sermon, was arrested along with several French Resistance fighters he had supported. He was deported to the Mauthausen camp, where he died 7 August 1944.[25] The viaduct at La Canardière was bombed by Allied forces on 30 May 1944, and the town was liberated by American tanks on 31 August 1944. The American 8th Air Force in turn installed itself at the hôtel du Grand Condé.

Post-war Chantilly edit

Since the war, the city has developed new neighborhoods on the north side of town. Some hotels and villas at the center of town became residences; some stables were torn down to allow housing to be built. As this new housing was built, a new population moved in who mostly work in the Paris area,[26] while the town lost almost all of its remaining industrial base when the Guilleminot factories shut down in 1992.

Population edit

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1968 10,246—    
1975 10,552+0.42%
1982 10,065−0.67%
1990 11,341+1.50%
1999 10,902−0.44%
2007 11,096+0.22%
2012 11,215+0.21%
2017 10,863−0.64%
Source: INSEE[27]

Monuments and tourist attractions edit

Château de Chantilly edit

The château de Chantilly was built for the House of Montmorency, then was home to the Condés and finally to the Duke of Aumale, fifth son of Louis-Philippe. He willed it to the Institute of France. Le château has two parts: the Petit Château and the Château Neuf. The first was built in 1560 by the architect Jean Bullant for the constable Anne de Montmorency. The interior decoration goes back to the 18th century for the larger apartments, and was carried out by Jean Aubert, Jean-Baptiste Huet, and Jean-Baptiste Oudry. The smaller apartments redone in the 19th century are on the ground floor. The Château Neuf was built by architect Honoré Daumet between 1876 and 1882 on the site of the portion of the older building destroyed at the beginning of the 19th century. It contains paint galleries, libraries and the chapel. A gallery, built by architecte Félix Duban in the 1840s, links the two buildings. The château is surrounded by a 115-hectare (285 acre) park which includes 25 hectares (62 acres) of water gardens. The parks includes large formal gardens designed by André Le Nôtre, the Anglo-Chinese garden installed between 1772 and 1774 in the center of which is the Hameau de Chantilly, the English garden installed in 1817 around the temple of Venus on the western side and, near the forest, the La Cabotière and de Sylvie parks. The entire estate was designated a historic monument by the decrees of 24 October and December 1988.

Musée Condé edit

The Condé Museum in the château has one of the oldest collections of historic art in France and its collection of paintings is only surpassed in France by the Musée du Louvre. The museum also contains a collection of 1,300 manuscripts including the daybook Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry. As a condition of its bequest to the Institut de France by the Duke of Aumale, the collection's presentation cannot be modified nor can it be loaned out, so it is a permanent fixture of Chantilly.

The Great Stables edit

The Grandes Écuries, which contain the Living Museum of the Horse, are among the most-visited horse-racing sites in the world. They were built between 1719 and 1740 by Jean Aubert. They are 186 meters (610') long with a central dome 38 meters (125') high, and could accommodate 240 horses and 500 dogs for the daily rides to hunt. Dressage demonstrations or re-enactments are held daily in the quarry. Horse shows are regularly held beneath the dome.

Porte Saint-Denis edit

The porte Saint-Denis is part of an unfinished pavilion originally intended to provide symmetry with the current entrance of the Great Stables, on the other side of the open-air stables. When the Duke of Bourbon died in 1740, only this portion remained unfinished when construction stopped. This pavilion was to mark the entrance to the burgeoning city. Its name came from the old land holdings of the Abbey of Saint-Denis, which was once very close to the château.

Urban development edit

 
Officer housing in the rue du Connétable

As a city, Chantilly is less than 250 years old. The oldest part is the rue du Connétable, which began in 1727 as a planned allotment called "the officials' housing", allocated from part of the château estate. These buildings are now numbered 25 through 67 on the rue du Connétable. The rest of the neighborhood was sold to the end of the main street, where the Condé hospice stood before the French Revolution.

After 1799, the town spread over the old footprint of the château gardens, with street names recalling the different gardens and sometimes following their old paths. The rue des Potagers, rue de la Faisanderie, and rue des Cascades are examples of this, i.e. Vegetable Street, Pheasantry Street and Waterfall Street. Street numbers here begin from the château rather than from the place Omer Vallon as in other neighborhoods. Development took the form of town houses, small 19th century buildings and other villas surrounded by gardens. Traces also exist of old stables dating from the beginnings of the racehorse community at the start of the 19th century.

Along the avenue du maréchal Joffre development was tied to the Paris road and the arrival of the railway. The station is at the end of the avenue. Here small buildings and villas built in the 19th and 20th century reflect the residential nature the town took on in this period. The area has become progressively more built up as villas and their gardens were replaced with private residences and master houses were transformed into multi-family dwellings.

Chantilly has three outer neighborhoods:

 
Pathway reserved for horses in the Bois Saint-Denis neighborhood

The Bois Saint-Denis[28][29] lies south of town, between the Paris road and the railway. This neighborhood grew out of the construction of stables, which got further and further from the center of town as land became more scarce. Forest parcels belonging to the Duke of Aumale began to be developed in 1890. While this neighborhood was originally within Gouvieux, it became part of Chantilly in 1928. It was then composed of brick stables, trainer residences and lodgings for the lads and jockeys. For a long time it was almost entirely devoted to racing, but over time, beginning in the 1960s, many stables were demolished or transformed into apartment buildings or housing subdivisions. Building codes now specifically protect this heritage and these racing activities.

The Verdun area is at the site of the old train station for the racetrack. (see the article on the Gare de Chantilly – Gouvieux in the French Wikipedia), and lies between the railway and the forest. When the old station closed around 1950, the land was used for apartment buildings, originally limited to railway workers. Much of it still belongs to the SNCF. The city's two high schools are nearby.

North of town neighborhoods lie on terraces overlooking the Nonette. These are made up of public housing (le quartier Lefébure), small subdivisions and privately owned multifamily residences (résidence Sylvie, résidence du Coq Chantant or du Castel) built during the 1960s and 1970s. These neighborhoods have developed their own school and church as well as other amenities used by the city as a whole, such as open space and a stadium.

 
Guilleminot factory

An intermediate area between the north end of town and the downtown area contains green zones such as the Grand Canal, the Saint-Jean canal and lying between them, in the meadow of the Grand Canal, the community gardens in the area known as La Canardière. The few buildings in this area are tied to Chantilly's old industrial base, such as the François Richard-Lenoir factory and the old Guilleminot factory and its outbuildings.

There are no specific protections for historic buildings or neighborhood preservation, nor is there a historic district such as in Senlis, but the town has local development codes and urban development plans. Much of the land (69%) in Chantilly is forest, so taking the racecourse into account the city only manages about 25% of its land, much of it around the historic monuments and therefore subject to architectural constraints.[30]

Notable residents edit

 
Paul Cézanne, Allée du Bois Bourillon à Chantilly,1888

Births in Chantilly edit

Economy edit

The economy of Chantilly has always been intimately associated with the French aristocracy. The most important economic activity, even today, is horse racing, which sprang up in the area due to the nobles who lived nearby. The other major economic center is on tourism.

Slightly more than half of the local population participates in the labor market, and when residents younger than fifteen and older than 64 are excluded the figure rises to 80%. Much of the active workforce, 41%, is employed outside of the Oise,[32] almost all of them in Île-de-France, either in Paris proper or in the area around the Charles de Gaulle Airport. This proportion has been gradually increasing over time. Approximately 7,000 commuters travel into Île-de-France every day.[33]

There are no large employers in Chantilly or its immediate environs. The largest is the Lycee Jean Rostand, followed by the city itself and the information technology company EDI. None has more than 250 employees.[33] On 1 January 2007, the city had 801 business, 193 of them retail.[34] The unemployment rate at the most recent census was 8.4% vs 10.7% for the Oise as a whole. For labor market purposes Chantilly is considered part of the Sud-Oise, which, along with Amiens, is the largest labor pool in Picardy.[35]

Horse racing edit

Chantilly is the largest center of horse training activities in France, with 2,633 horses, 2,620 of them thoroughbreds, lodged in approximately a hundred training stables. This represents 70% of the race horses in Paris. The next closest, at Maisons-Laffitte, only has about 800. About two thousand area residents are directly or indirectly employed in this field.

Given the real estate crunch inside city limits, nowadays stables can only be found in the Bois St-Denis neighborhood, where there are thirty, which specialise in gallop. Fifty-four others, also specializing in gallop, can be found in Lamorlaye, Gouvieux, Coye-la-Forêt and to a lesser extent at Avilly-Saint-Léonard. Fifty-nine jockeys live in Chantilly and 109 in the rest of the municipal area.[36]

Trainers in the area include Criquette Head-Maarek, Freddy Head, Pascal Bary, André Fabre, Marcel Rolland, Élie Lellouche, Nicolas Clément, Alain de Royer-Dupré and those attached to the stables of Karim Aga Khan IV. Jockeys in the area include Dominique Bœuf, Christophe-Patrice Lemaire, Olivier Peslier, Thierry Thuilliez and Thierry Jarnet.

France Galop edit

The stables affiliated with France Galop use a number of installations that the organisation manages and maintains. 60 permanent and 30 seasonal employees work at these installations, which encompass 1,900 hectares (7¼ sq. mi.). Among these installations is the des Aigles track at Gouvieux as well as others at Lamorlaye and Coye-la-Forêt, which has thirty-odd trainers working in a 60-hectare (150 acre) facility, as well as the 15-hectare (40 acre) track at Avilly-Saint-Léonard. France Galop also manages 47 kilometres (30 miles) of trails covering 1,500 hectares (5¾ sq. mi.) in Chantilly Forest, which are strictly limited to horses at certain times of day.[37]

In all, the organisation manages 120 hectares (300 acres) of grass, 120 kilometres (75 miles) of sand trail and one dirt trail used 365 days a year regardless of the weather, which translates to 33,000 gallops a year including 2,000 at the racecourse alone.[38]

Equine businesses edit

A number of professionals and businesses specializing in racehorses have grown up in the Chantilly area. Two prominent horse transportation companies are based in Lamorlaye and Gouvieux respectively.[39] Three veterinarians within the municipal boundaries specialize in horses, and another five in the adjacent communes.[40] Chantilly has one farrier and there are another four nearby. Similarly, there is one saddler and another seven based outside town.[41] Chantilly has two racehorse dealers; another five are based in the surrounding area.[42]

A horse-racing school, AFASEC's "The Windmill" is based in Gouvieux and provides instruction to 185 jockeys and trainees, many of whom are housed in a facility in Chantilly proper.[43] Finally, there are plans to build a biomass plant that will use the manure generated by the stables.[44]

Racecourse edit

The racecourse hosts 25 meets and 197 races every year, including the prestigious Prix du Jockey Club and Prix de Diane. It is one of six Parisian racecourses managed by France Galop, although it is owned by the Institut de France.

When it was threatened with closing, 24 million euros were raised to modernize it by a public interest group that included the mayor's office, France Galop, the Institute of France, the Communauté de communes de l'aire cantilienne (CCAC), an intergovernmental commission of Chantilly-area governments, the Oise council, the Picary regional council, and Prince Karim Aga Khan. Work was completed in 2007 and included a new ring, repairs and modernization of the stands, a scale and a new parking area. It now receives 40,000 visitors a year.[45]

Tourism edit

Tourism in Chantilly centers on the Domaine de Chantilly, which owns the chateau and associated lands. The chateau itself had roughly a quarter million visitors in 2007, while the Living Museum of the Horse drew 149,000.[46] The other big tourist draw is Chantilly Forest, which received as many as four million visits yearly. This makes it the 7th most-visited forest in the Paris region.[47] Most of the visitors are day excursionists. Unlike Versailles and Fontainebleau, foreign tourists account for only 15% of the traffic, which can at peak times reach 20,000 simultaneous visitors to the various Domaine properties.[48] Every year an international show jumping competition, the Chantilly Jumping, which is part of the Global Champions Tour, is held in 2 arenas in the middle of the racecourse.[49]

Chantilly lies within the Parc naturel régional Oise-Pays de France. The medieval city of Senlis and its cathedral, the abbeys of Chaalis, Moncel, and Royaumont, and the priory at Saint-Leu-d'Esserent are nearby. Natural attractions include the forests of Halatte and Ermenonville, and Parc Jean-Jacques-Rousseau in Ermenonville. Nearby theme parks like La Mer de sable and Parc Astérix also draw visitors to the area.

In 2005, due to difficulties the Institute of France was experiencing with the management of the domain, the more important elements of the domain were taken over by a non-profit corporation created and supported financially by the Aga Khan, charged with economic development, restoration and the development of tourism.[50][51]

Business tourism is another important factor. Proximity to Paris and to the Charles de Gaulle airport combine with the high quality of local hotel properties make it a prime conference destination. More than two thousand are held there every year. Chantilly and its immediate vicinity have three four-star hotels:

There are also four three-star hotels. A conference center run by the Capgemini corporation is also located in the immediate vicinity, in Gouvieux.[52] Another four-star hotel is being built in the Rue du Connétable near the Jeu de Paume, with an additional luxury residence planned for Avilly-Saint-Léonard.[53]

Chantilly Arts and Elegance Richard Mille edit

The automobile elegance contest of Chantilly Arts & Elegance Richard Mille takes place in the castle, similar to the Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este in Italy, Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance in California and Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance in Florida.

Communication and transportation edit

Roads edit

The old king's road that once connected Pierrefitte-sur-Seine to Dunkirk by way of Amiens bisects Chantilly from north to south. Formerly known as route nationale 16 this road has been renamed departmental road 1016. Trucks are not illegal on this road, but signs to the north and south of town suggest taking the A1 or A16 instead. The D924a connects to the Flanders road, the old route nationale 17, at La Chapelle-en-Serval. The D924 runs to Senlis. Trucks are banned on both of these roads, which connect to the A1. The speed limit on D924a is 70 km/h (45 mph) for its entire length through the commune, since it passes through Chantilly Forest, which has many deer crossings.

Rail and public transportation edit

 
Train station in Chantilly

The Chantilly-Gouvieux train station was put into service in 1859 on the Paris–Lille railway. It is served by the SNCF via the TER Hauts-de-France network. Express trains reach Paris-Nord in 22 minutes and Creil in seven.[54]

The station is also served by line D of the Île-de-France RER. In 2006, 920,000 trips took place between Chantilly and Paris-Nord.

A small public bus network, Desserte urbaine cantilienne (DUC), links the Lefébure neighborhood to Bois-St-Denis by way of the train station. A branch goes past the château and the Saint-Pierre cemetery. Passengers ride for free.

Airports and airport access edit

Chantilly is 30 km (19 miles) from Charles de Gaulle Airport and 54 km (34 miles) from the Beauvais-Tillé Airport. There is no direct route to either by public transportation.

 
Les Aigles horse training center was requisitioned during World War II and used as an airfield

An airfield named aérodrome de la Vidamée-Chantilly was opened in 1910 in Courteuil and served as a military air base during World War I.[55] It has since disappeared. Another airfield, known as terrain de Chantilly-Les Aigles, was created during World War II by requisitioning the Les Aigles horse training center in Gouvieux. It was occupied during the Battle of France by the chase group I/1 from the Étampes-Mondésir air base.[56]

Trails edit

 
Ponds in Commelles near Coye-la-Forêt

Two hiking trails cross the commune. The GR 11 circles the greater Paris area and runs between Senlis and Saint Maximin. It cuts through the parc de Sylvie on the château grounds, goes through the Porte Saint-Denis and descends to the Saint-Jean canal, running alongside it until it cuts across the neighborhood known as Coq chantant (Crowing Rooster). The GR 12, which runs from Paris to Amsterdam, goes from Senlis through the south end of town towards the Commelles ponds, then reaches Coye-la-Forêt. The GR 1, known as Tour de Paris, runs along the southeastern edge of town on the south bank of the Commelles ponds.

Chantilly Forest is criss-crossed with many paths, which are barred to pedestrians between 6 am and 1 pm, to allow horses to be trained. Chantilly finished a network of bike paths in June 2008 which allow access by bike to Gouvieux, Vineuil-Saint-Firmin et Avilly-Saint-Léonard.

Sights edit

International relations edit

Chantilly is twinned with:

Climate edit

The climate in Val-d'Oise is comparable to that of the northern part of Île-de-France; it has been described as falling somewhere between the oceanic climate of Brest on the coast and the continental climate of Strasbourg. Rainfall is relatively light and with moderately heavy rainfall in spring and early summer, then again in the autumn, which is typical of oceanic climates, but storms are of the continental variety.[57]

Climate data for Chantilly, Oise, France
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 9
(48)
10.2
(50.4)
10.1
(50.2)
14.1
(57.4)
20.9
(69.6)
21.5
(70.7)
24.3
(75.7)
22.8
(73.0)
19.3
(66.7)
14.9
(58.8)
10.2
(50.4)
4.8
(40.6)
15.2
(59.3)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 3.5
(38.3)
1.2
(34.2)
3.7
(38.7)
4.6
(40.3)
10
(50)
11.5
(52.7)
13
(55)
13.7
(56.7)
8.6
(47.5)
6.5
(43.7)
4.3
(39.7)
−0.3
(31.5)
6.7
(44.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 53
(2.1)
38
(1.5)
91
(3.6)
53
(2.1)
64
(2.5)
24
(0.9)
34
(1.3)
71
(2.8)
29
(1.1)
76
(3.0)
47
(1.9)
31
(1.2)
611
(24)
Source: Météo-France, Creil weather station, 2008

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Répertoire national des élus: les maires" (in French). data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises. 13 September 2022.
  2. ^ "Populations légales 2021". The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. 28 December 2023.
  3. ^ "Chantilly". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  4. ^ Édouard Launet (12 September 2007), "Le trou d'où sort Paris", Libération, retrieved 22 July 2009
  5. ^ "Carte archéologique de la Gaule: 60. Oise". Carte archéologique de la Gaule – L'Oise. éditions de la MSH – Académie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres. 1995. pp. 202–203. ISBN 2-87754-039-1.
  6. ^ Gérad Mahieux (2008), Les origines du château et de la seigneurie de Chantilly, vol. 1, Cahiers de Chantilly
  7. ^ Macon 1908 p. 10–16
  8. ^ Macon 1908 p. 30–31
  9. ^ Macon 10–12 and 23–25
  10. ^ Macon 1909–1910, pp 15 and 57
  11. ^ Macon 1908, pp 16–19 and 24–26
  12. ^ Macon 1909–1910 p. 97–114
  13. ^ Macon 1912, p. 26–35, 44, 62 and 67
  14. ^ Blay 2006, p. 273, chapter entitled Une culture urbaine sous influence parisienne et anglaise
  15. ^ Chantilly sous la botte (1870–1871), Association de sauvegarde de Chantilly et de son environnement, 1990
  16. ^ Blay 2006, p. 138, chapter entitled Évolution des structures et spécialisation des emplois
  17. ^ Jean-Pierre Blay (1992), "Industrie hippique, immigration anglaise et structures sociales à Chantilly au xixe siècle", Revue Européenne des Migrations Internationales, Revue européenne de migrations internationales, 8–2 (2): 121–132, doi:10.3406/remi.1992.1324
  18. ^ Blay 2006, p. 179–207, chapter entitled Loisirs mondains, vie sportive et snobisme de classe à la Belle époque
  19. ^ Blay 2006, p. 63–77, chapter entitled Le duc d'Aumale et Chantilly : bienveillance princière et pérennité du domaine
  20. ^ Chronologie de Chantilly, association de sauvegarde de Chantilly et de son environnement, January 2007, archived from the original on 23 February 2011, retrieved 20 July 2009
  21. ^ (PDF), Ville de Chantilly-Château de Chantilly, 2008, ISBN 978-2-9532603-0-4, archived from the original (PDF) on 7 September 2011
  22. ^ Bernard Chambon (2008), Le Grand quartier général à Chantilly (1914–1917), vol. 1, Cahiers de Chantilly, pp. 59–103
  23. ^ François Cochet (2006), "6–8 décembre 1915, Chantilly : la Grande Guerre change de rythme", Revue historique des armées, 242 (242): 16–25
  24. ^ Département d'histoire locale du centre culturel Marguerite Dembreville de Chantilly (2008), (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 13 November 2013, retrieved 9 January 2013
  25. ^ , l'association de sauvegarde de Chantilly et de son environnement, January 2007, archived from the original on 5 September 2009, retrieved 20 July 2009
  26. ^ L'Oise et ses cantons – Chantilly (PDF), Insee, 2006, retrieved 20 July 2009
  27. ^ Population en historique depuis 1968, INSEE
  28. ^ Michel Bouchet (2004), "Le Quartier du Bois Saint-Denis d'hier à aujourd'hui", Études cantiliennes, Association pour la sauvegarde de Chantilly et de son environnement, p. 23
  29. ^ Jean-Pierre Blay (2006), "Le bois Saint-Denis, une quartier conquis par Chantilly pour le cheval (1891–1930)", Les Princes et les jockeys, vol. 1, Atlantica, pp. 90–105, ISBN 2-84394-903-3
  30. ^ chambre régionale des comptes de Picardie (16 September 2003), Rapport d'observations définitives sur la gestion de la commune de Chantilly (PDF), Cour des Comptes – site des Juridictions financières, archived from the original (PDF) on 23 February 2011
  31. ^ a b c Muriel Le Guen, Guide pour la visite des cimetières cantiliens, mairie de Chantilly
  32. ^ Dossier statistique sur la commune de Chantilly [archive] sur site de l'Insee, juin 2009. Consulté le 22 juillet 2009
  33. ^ a b L'Oise et ses cantons – Chantilly [archive] sur site de l'Insee, 2006. Consulté le 20 juillet 2009
  34. ^ Dossier statistique sur la commune de Chantilly sur site de l'Insee, juin 2009. Consulté le 22 juillet 2009
  35. ^ Carte des zones d'emploi et nombre d'emplois au 31 décembre 2006 sur www.eco.picardie.net. Consulté le 22 juillet 2009
  36. ^ Entraîneurs et jockeys adhérents à l'Association général des jockeys de galop en France recensés dans le Guide pratique édité par l'Association des entraîneurs de Galop, édition 2008
  37. ^ Le centre d'entraînement de Chantilly sur site du journal France Galop. Retrieved 22 July 2009.
  38. ^ Guide pratique, Association des entraîneurs de galop, 2008, p. 251–252. Chiffres 2006.
  39. ^ STH Hippavia sur www.sth-hipavia.com. Consulté le 7 août 2009, la plus ancienne originaire de Chantilly et STC Horse de Gouvieux
  40. ^ Liste des adhérents à l'association sur site de l'association vétérinaire équine française. Consulté le 22 juillet 2009
  41. ^ Pages jaunes (Yellow Pages)
  42. ^ Coming to France? (liste des membres) sur site de l'association française des courtiers en chevaux de galop (AFC). Consulté le 22 juillet 2009
  43. ^ L'école " Le Moulin à Vent " Chantilly-Gouvieux [archive] sur site de l'école des courses hippiques. Consulté le 22 juillet 2009
  44. ^ Marie Persidat, " L'usine de méthanisation revient au Mont-de-Pô ", Le Parisien, 3 juillet 2009 [texte intégral [archive] (page consultée le 28 juillet 2009)]
  45. ^ Vivre à Chantilly, L'hippodrome de Chantilly, no 90, p. 4–5, juillet-août 2009
  46. ^ Touriscopie 2007 : les chiffres du tourisme dans l'Oise, 2007, retrieved 22 July 2009
  47. ^ La fréquentation des forêts publiques en Île-de-France, CREDOC, July 2000
  48. ^ Sabine Gignoux (13 May 2009), "Karim Aga Khan, chef spirituel des ismaéliens (1/2) : "À Chantilly, comme ailleurs, la culture est créatrice de ressources"", La Croix, p. 23
  49. ^ "Homepage | Jumping Chantilly". jumping-chantilly.com. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  50. ^ La Fondation pour la sauvegarde et le développement du domaine de Chantilly, Institut de France
  51. ^ Grégoire Allix,Emmanuel de Roux (26 March 2005), "L'Aga Khan remet en selle le domaine de Chantilly", Le Monde, retrieved 1 July 2009
  52. ^ Page d'accueil, Les Fontaines
  53. ^ Avilly-Saint-Léonard : le complexe hôtelier prévu pour la fin 2011, Le Parisien édition Oise, 26 February 2009
  54. ^ Horaires des trains Paris-Chantilly-Creil (PDF), SNCF, 2012, retrieved 8 January 2012
  55. ^ Patrick Serou, L'Aérodrome de la "Vidamée", retrieved 20 July 2009
  56. ^ Frédéric Gondron (1999), "Un aérodrome peu connu, " Les Aigles " Gouvieux/Chantilly (août 1939-juin 1940)", Bulletin de la société historique de Gouvieux (Oise) no 10
  57. ^ The data below is for 2008. "France: Climate", Encyclopædia Britannica, 29 June 2023

Bibliography edit

  • Gustave Macon, Histoire des édifices de culte de Chantilly, in Comité archéologique de Senlis, Comptes-rendus et mémoires, années 1900–01, Senlis, Imprimerie de Charles Duriez, 4th edition vol. IV, 1902, p. 179–260 (ISSN 1162-8820)
  • Gustave Macon, Histoire de Chantilly, in Comptes-rendus et Mémoires, années 1908 à 1912, Comité archéologique de Senlis, Senlis (original edition) / Res Universis, Amiens (second edition), 1909–1913 (reprinted 1989), reproduction of the original edition originale, four volumes in one (ISBN 2-87760-170-6) (ISSN 1162-8820).
unequaled summary of the city's history from its origins to the 19th century
Les origines, volume 1, 1908 Online
Formation et développement (1692–1800), volume 2, 1909–1910 online
Administration et vie au xviiie siècle volume 3, 1911 online
La Révolution, l'Empire, la Restauration, volume 4, 1912 online
Focuses on the château
  • Jean-Pierre Blay, Les Princes et les jockeys, Biarritz, Atlantica, 2006, 630 p. (ISBN 2-84394-903-3).
Thesis on Chantilly history in the 19th and early 20th century, focuses on relationship with horse racing
La Ville du cheval souverain, volume 1
Vie sportive et sociabilité urbaine, volume 2
  • Isabelle Dumont-Fillon, Chantilly, Alan Sutton, Mémoire en images collection, 1999 (ISBN 2-84253-301-1)

External links edit

  • Chantilly's portal (in French)
  • Businesses in Chantilly

chantilly, oise, confused, with, chantilly, virginia, chantilly, shan, french, ʃɑ, tiji, picard, cantily, commune, oise, department, valley, nonette, hauts, france, region, northern, france, surrounded, chantilly, forest, town, inhabitants, 2017, falls, within. Not to be confused with Chantilly Virginia Chantilly ʃ ae n ˈ t ɪ l i shan TIL ee 3 French ʃɑ tiji Picard Cantily is a commune in the Oise department in the Valley of the Nonette in the Hauts de France region of Northern France Surrounded by Chantilly Forest the town of 10 863 inhabitants 2017 falls within the metropolitan area of Paris It lies 38 4 km 23 9 miles north northeast of the centre of Paris and together with six neighbouring communes forms an urban area of 37 254 inhabitants 2018 ChantillyCommuneThe Chateau de Chantilly completed in 1882 houses the Institut de France s Musee Conde Coat of armsLocation of ChantillyChantillyShow map of FranceChantillyShow map of Hauts de FranceCoordinates 49 12 00 N 2 28 00 E 49 2000 N 2 4667 E 49 2000 2 4667CountryFranceRegionHauts de FranceDepartmentOiseArrondissementSenlisCantonChantillyIntercommunalityAire CantilienneGovernment Mayor 2020 2026 Isabelle Wojtowiez 1 Area116 19 km2 6 25 sq mi Population 2021 2 10 652 Density660 km2 1 700 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST INSEE Postal code60141 60500Elevation35 112 m 115 367 ft 1 French Land Register data which excludes lakes ponds glaciers gt 1 km2 0 386 sq mi or 247 acres and river estuaries Intimately tied to the House of Montmorency in the 15th to 17th centuries the Chateau de Chantilly was home to the Princes of Conde cousins of the Kings of France from the 17th to the 19th centuries It now houses the Musee Conde Chantilly is also known for its horse racing track Chantilly Racecourse where prestigious races are held for the Prix du Jockey Club and Prix de Diane Chantilly and the surrounding communities are home to the largest racehorse training community in France Chantilly is also home to the Living Museum of the Horse with stables built by the Princes of Conde It is considered one of the more important tourist destinations in the Paris area Chantilly gave its name to Chantilly cream and to Chantilly lace The city was the base for the England national football team during the Euro 2016 Championship Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Topography 1 2 Hydrology and water supply 2 History 2 1 Before the city 2 2 New parish to modern times 2 3 The beginnings of the commune 2 4 Thomas Muir connection 2 5 A 19th century vacation and leisure destination 2 6 Chantilly in World War I 2 7 World War II 2 8 Post war Chantilly 3 Population 4 Monuments and tourist attractions 4 1 Chateau de Chantilly 4 2 Musee Conde 4 3 The Great Stables 4 4 Porte Saint Denis 5 Urban development 6 Notable residents 6 1 Births in Chantilly 7 Economy 7 1 Horse racing 7 1 1 France Galop 7 1 2 Equine businesses 7 1 3 Racecourse 7 2 Tourism 7 3 Chantilly Arts and Elegance Richard Mille 8 Communication and transportation 8 1 Roads 8 2 Rail and public transportation 8 3 Airports and airport access 8 4 Trails 9 Sights 10 International relations 11 Climate 12 See also 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksGeography editChantilly lies in the Parisian basin at the south end of the region of Hauts de France and the north end of the Paris metropolitan area It belongs to the historic region of Valois Chantilly lies 39 km 25 miles southwest of Beauvais 79 km 50 miles south of Amiens and 38 km 24 miles north of Paris Saint Maximin lies to the north Vineuil Saint Firmin to the northeast Avilly Saint Leonard to the east Pontarme and Orry la Ville to the south east Coye la Foret to the south Lamorlaye to the southwest and Gouvieux to the west Chantilly is the centre of an urban area that includes the communes of Avilly Saint Leonard Boran sur Oise Coye la Foret Gouvieux Lamorlaye and Vineuil Saint Firmin It is the third largest urban area in the Oise and the seventh largest in Hauts de France It has no large businesses or heavy industry and 40 of the population works in Ile de France Topography edit nbsp Map of ChantillyChantilly straddles the junction of the Paris Basin and the western County of Valois of which the Nonette River is a boundary The site of the town was originally a clearing or meadowland sometimes called a lawn or pelouse which is mostly occupied today by the racecourse The remaining open space between the town and the racecourse is always referred to as the little lawn The highest point in the area 112 meters 378 is at Bois Lorris in Lamorlaye The lowest elevation is 35 metres 115 at the Canardiere on the banks of the Nonette in Gouvieux The commune sits on a Lutetian sedimentary limestone plateau covered by Chantilly Forest Sand created by wind and erosion covers this chalky plateau This stone has also been used for building in parts of the region and still is today in the adjoining commune of Saint Maximin It was also used for building in Chantilly itself during the 18th century when a quarry on the current site of the racecourse produced stone for the court officials housing and the stables In the following century the quarry was used to grow mushrooms then as an air raid shelter during World War II It now belongs to the Chantilly Estate and is periodically open to the public 4 Another geological feature is alluvial accumulations in the river valleys which have allowed in the case of the Nonette the development of community gardens in the locality known as the Canardiere Hydrology and water supply edit nbsp The Canardiere on the Nonette nbsp Canal of the MachineThe town is bounded at its southern edge by the Theve a 33 km 20 mile long tributary of the Oise River At this point that valley contains the Commelles ponds created in the 13th century by the monks of Chaalis Abbey to stock fish The river Nonette runs through the town itself This 44 km 27 mile long river is also part of the watershed of the Oise and is channeled into canals throughout the municipality In fact the creation of the chateau gardens by Andre Le Notre required the complete transformation of the waterway starting in 1663 The riverbed was moved a hundred meters yards north to create the 2 5 km 1 mile long Grand Canal that runs in front of the chateau The old riverbed became the 800 metre mile long Canal Saint Jean named after a 16th century chapel demolished when the gardens were created The Canardiere beneath the actual viaduct was channeled and cleaned up at this time also The Canal de la Machine perpendicular to the other two and nearly 300 meters yards long brought water to the Pavilon du Manse which fed it to the garden ponds and waterfalls in the western gardens since disappeared sending it to a reservoir once located on the lawn Part of this reservoir still exists near the racecourse but it no longer contains water Some of this hydrologic work was used to feed factories in the valley The gardens that remain were watered by a completely different system based on an aqueduct coming from the area around Senlis nbsp The Chateau de Chantilly seen from the road north of townIn the 18th century a mineral water source was discovered in the valley and a garden pavilion was built between 1725 and 1728 to allow the public to come drink from it This was a separate source from the source of ferruginous water called Chantilly water discovered at La Chausee in Gouvieux and bottled and carbonated there from 1882 into the 20th century Also in the 18th century a supply of drinking water was created by diverting water from the reservoir In 1823 the last prince of Conde had eighteen fountains installed for the use of residents In 1895 these were replaced with a supply from a water treatment plant in the neighboring village of Lamorlaye This brought in water from Chantilly Lamorlaye and Boran sur Oise then distributed the treated water through two water towers on the Mont de Po in Gouvieux This water supply has been managed by the private company Lyonnaise des eaux since 1928 The sewer system was installed in 1878 but initially limited to the area around rue d Aumale the Conde Hospice and the rue de Paris now known as the avenue du Marechal Joffre It was extended to the entire town in 1910 through a state subsidy financed by a tax on racetrack bets A sewage treatment plant was built in 1969 at La Canardiere then moved to Gouvieux in 2006 This 22 km 14 mile network is administered by a regional agency the syndicat intercommunal pour le traitement des eaux de la vallee de la Nonette SICTEUV which covers Apremont Avilly Saint Leonard Chantilly Gouvieux et Vineuil Saint Firmin History editBefore the city edit nbsp Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry February Musee CondeNo traces of habitation from the prehistoric or Iron Age eras have ever been found in Chantilly A Roman era grave site was however found on the banks of the Nonette and Gallo Roman roads have been discovered in Chantilly Forest Merovingian tombs from the seventh century were found in the 17th and 19th centuries not far from the Faisanderie 5 Around 1223 Guy IV of Senlis agreed with the prior of Saint Leu d Esserent that first referred to Terra cantiliaci He was the royal grand bouteiller a hereditary position in charge of the king s vineyards and became the first lord of Chantilly which at the time was little more than a rock in the middle of a swampy area A strong house was mentioned in the area in a 1227 document In 1282 an act of the Parliament of Paris mentions Chantilly Forest 6 A 1358 document mentions the destruction of the chateau in the Grande Jacquerie It was rebuilt by Pierre d Orgemont and completed in 1394 During the Hundred Years War Anglo Burgundian forces laid siege to the chateau and Jacqueline de Paynel widow of Pierre II d Orgemont who died at the battle of Agincourt as well as of Jean de Fayel was forced to surrender it In return the lives of those in the chateau were spared but the surrounding villages were laid to waste 7 The city began as just a few hamlets scattered outside the chateau At the beginning of the 16th century there were four Les Grandes Fontaines near the foot of the current rue des Fontaines Les Petites Fontaines also called Normandie the foot of the current quai de la Canardiere and rue de la Machine Les Aigles near today s racetrack which owes its name to the labourers who lived there in the late Middle Ages It disappeared completely during the French Wars of Religion Quinquempoix the largest and closest to the chateau 8 nbsp The Hotel de Beauvais built in 1539 is the oldest building in Chantilly today In this period Quinquempoix began to see an extension of the chateau s functions It was home to a chapel devoted to Saint Germain mentioned as early as 1219 which disappeared in the 17th century with the extension of the chateau s gardens Several houses were built in Quinquempoix to accommodate the prince s court officials Also the hotel de Beauvais built in 1539 lodged the master of the hunt of constable connetable Anne de Montmorency The hotel de Quinquempoix built around 1553 housed the constable s equerry 9 In 1515 Anne s father Guillaume de Montmorency had obtained a papal bull that gave him the right to have mass said and all the sacraments performed in the chapel of the chateau which was one of the first steps toward autonomy from the surrounding parishes 10 New parish to modern times edit In 1673 Louis II de Bourbon the Prince of Conde known as the Grand Conde built a new road called rue Gouvieux which is now the rue du Connetable The land ceded by the chateau on both sides of this road formed the nucleus of the new town as guesthouses workshops for the artisans of the chateau and lodgings for servants sprang up This embryonic town was divided between the parish of Gouvieux in the diocese of Beauvais and the parish of Saint Leonard in the diocese of Senlis nbsp The Chateau de Chantilly in the 18th century after the work done by the Condes Gouache by Jean Baptiste Lallement in the Musee Conde Louis expressed a wish in his will for a parish church near the chateau Henri Jules de Bourbon Conde fulfilled his father s wish in 1692 by building the church of Notre Dame and creating a new parish under the Bishop of Senlis superseding all existing parishes Chantilly was thus established as autonomous nbsp The Great StablesHis grandson Louis Henri Duke of Bourbon can be called the founder of the city since he drew up the first city plans He brought planning to the town design and renamed the rue Gouvieux the Grande Rue After he built the Great Stables in 1721 he created a development in 1727 and sold lots for housing to court officials holders of hereditary positions at the court of the Condes The architectural standards for this housing were drawn by Jean Aubert architect of the Great Stables This housing was built between 1730 and 1733 In 1723 the Hospice de la Charite was built at the end of the Grande Rue In the second half of the 18th century the princes furthered economic activity Lace had been produced in the town since the 17th century but now reached its apogee Porcelain manufacture began in 1726 and was established in the rue de la Machine in 1730 Industrial buildings were built in 1780 at the end of the Grand Canal to take advantage of the power provided by the waterfall The beginnings of the commune edit nbsp Chantilly Town HallDuring the French Revolution Chantilly became a commune whose which boundaries matched those of the parish The first mayor was the administrator of the estate Andre Joseph Antheaume de Surval The other city council members were recruited from among the chateau officials The Condes were among the first to flee abroad just days after the fall of the Bastille on 17 July 1789 The estate was sequestered on 13 June 1792 following the law on emigres and subsequently subdivided and sold 11 nbsp Potager des Princes or kitchen garden of the PrincesThe first section was sold between 1793 and 1795 the old kitchen garden the water garden and the last land available along today s rue du Connetable and around the petite pelouse as well as the town houses that belonged to the Prince Much of the land in this first section never came back to the estate The rest of the land was divided into lots in 1798 and sold over time 12 When the Reign of Terror began the mayor was run out on 15 August 1793 he was replaced by a Jacobin The chateau was transformed into a prison from 1793 to 1794 designated for suspects from the Department of Oise Sold as a national asset in 1799 the chateau was transformed into a stone quarry by a pair of entrepreneurs Only the little chateau was preserved The Great Stables were requisitioned by the army and used in turn by the 11th mounted horse regiment fr the 1er dragons or 1st Dragoons from 1803 to 1806 then the 1er regiment de chevau legers lanciers polonais or 1st Light Artillery Polish Lancers from 1808 to 1814 13 nbsp Great Stables at Chantilly RacecourseA number of industrialists took advantage of the sale of Conde assets to further develop their business activities In 1792 the porcelain manufacturing enterprise turned its hand to ceramics under the hand of its new English owner Christophe Potter A copper laminating factory was established in the industrial buildings on the canal in 1801 and Francois Richard Lenoir fr opened a mill in 1807 It employed as many as 600 people and brought prosperity back to the commune Using the new English techniques it diversified in cloth particularly in calico manufacture and laundering It began to decline in 1814 then lost its monopoly and failed in 1822 In 1815 prince Louis Joseph Prince of Conde came back to the area for good He retrieved part of his family s former estate and bought back the rest His son Louis VI Henri fr had fountains installed in 1823 as well as many of the street lamps in 1827 Thomas Muir connection edit nbsp Thomas MuirThe Scottish political reformer Thomas Muir had been banished to Botany Bay for 14 years for the crime of sedition in 1793 He managed to escape having only spent 13 months there An adventurous journey followed that eventually brought Muir as a citizen of France to Paris Muir became in time the principal intermediary between the French Directory and the various republican refugees in Paris He was aware that his movements were under scrutiny by British Prime Minister William Pitt s agents In his last known communication with the Directory in October 1798 he requested permission to leave Paris for somewhere less conspicuous where his crucial negotiations with the Scottish emissaries could be conducted in safety Sometime in the middle of November 1798 Muir moved incognito to Chantilly On 26 January 1799 he died there suddenly and alone with only a small child for company So tight had his security been that not even local officials knew of his presence or identity No identifying documents or papers were found on his person and his name was discovered only when the postman remembered delivering newspapers to him addressed to Citoyen Thomas Muir Several days later when the news of Muir s death reached Paris a brief obituary notice was inserted in Le Moniteur Universel saying that he had died from a recurrence of his old wounds A 19th century vacation and leisure destination edit Chantilly was also in the 19th century a playground for aristocrats and artists as well as home to an English community with ties to horse racing The first horse races were run in 1834 on the lawn area known as the pelouse and the 1840s saw an influx of bettors of all social classes especially from Paris The success of the horse races was primarily due to the opening of the train station in 1859 Later a public station allowed the arrival of up to 20 000 bettors and visitors on race days A track and permanent seating were gradually added to form the racecourse in use today Attendance records began to be kept just before World War I 40 000 people attended the prix du Jockey Club in 1912 14 During the Franco Prussian War Chantilly was occupied by the Prussian army for almost a year The Grand Duke of Mecklenburg head of the 18th Army Corps occupied the chateau along with his general staff His troops requisitioned the Great Stables the racecourse stables which had been evacuated and some privately owned residences as well 15 A racing economy grew up around the racecourse with many stables devoted to training thoroughbred horses Urban development grew up around these racing activities with new neighbourhoods such as the Bois Saint Denis exclusively devoted to the activity There were two trainers and seventeen hands in the 1846 and thirty trainers and 309 nands in 1896 16 Many in the racing community were British 76 of the jockeys lads and trainers in 1911 and the British were such a presence in the area that an Anglican chapel was built around 1870 17 At the same time Chantilly was becoming a vacation destination with many aristocrats members of the haute bourgeoisie and artists moving to the area and building villas and chateaux in the surrounding communes such as the Rothschild family in Gouvieux for example Luxury hotels were also built such as the Hotel du Grand Conde in 1908 18 Henri d Orleans Duke of Aumale last lord of the town encouraged the development of the racecourse and of the town as well as the arrival of the English nbsp Attack on the Chantilly branch of the Societe Generale by the Bonnot Gang of criminal anarchists as depicted in the Petit Journal Between 1876 and 1882 the Duke had the chateau rebuilt and used it to house one of the most beautiful art collections of the time By receiving high society in his palace such as Empress Elizabeth of Austria known as Sissi and the Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovitch of Russia he contributed to the growth of the town 19 When the chateau was opened to the public in 1898 after it was willed to the Institute of France it drew even more tourists to the town more than 100 000 in the first six months 20 Naturally such a profusion of wealth also provoked some greed On the morning of 25 March 1912 the Bonnot Gang robbed the Societe Generale de Chantilly and killed two employees before they fled This was soon before they broke up and Jules Bonnot died in a shootout with police The groups was notorious for using an automobile to get away and for the coverage provoked by a Jules Bonnot s appearance brandishing a Browning automatic at the office of Le Petit Journal to complain about its coverage of their activities Chantilly in World War I edit The German Army entered Chantilly on 3 September 1914 but did not stay leaving the next day The chateau was occupied but there was no real destruction unlike the neighboring towns of Creil and Senlis Oise where there were fires and considerable destruction French soldiers did not come back until 9 September After the First Battle of the Marne General Joseph Joffre installed his headquarters in Chantilly because of the easy access it offered to Paris by rail The Grand Quartier General or HQ took over the hotel du Grand Conde on 29 November 1914 with 450 officers and 800 clerks and soldiers Joffre for his part lodged at the Villa Poiret about a hundred yards away 21 22 Joffre held the conference of Chantilly from 6 to 8 December 1915 to makes battle plans with his Allied counterparts and to coordinate military offensives for 1916 23 General Headquarters moved to Beauvais in December 1916 and Chantilly became home to hospitals for soldiers wounded on the front one in the hotel Lovenjou the other in the Egler Pavilion One of the three camouflage workshops of the French First Engineers Regiment opened in 1917 in custom built barracks on the petite pelouse near the racetrack Up to 1200 women were hired as well as 200 German prisoners of war and 200 workers from Annam in French Indo China then a French protectorate They painted canvases which the army used to mask artillery and troop movements from view 24 The town grew in 1928 with the annexation of the Bois Saint Denis from Gouvieux In 1930 a monument was put up to Marechal Joffre on the avenue which now bears his name World War II edit The Wehrmacht entered the city on 13 September 1940 and occupied it They used the Great Stables as a veterinary hospital for the horses they brought in from Germany by some estimates the city was home to as many as 400 German horses during the war The military command took over the hotel du Grand Conde Following the assassination of a collaborator the parish priest Abbot Charpentier who authored a 1943 anti Nazi sermon was arrested along with several French Resistance fighters he had supported He was deported to the Mauthausen camp where he died 7 August 1944 25 The viaduct at La Canardiere was bombed by Allied forces on 30 May 1944 and the town was liberated by American tanks on 31 August 1944 The American 8th Air Force in turn installed itself at the hotel du Grand Conde Post war Chantilly edit Since the war the city has developed new neighborhoods on the north side of town Some hotels and villas at the center of town became residences some stables were torn down to allow housing to be built As this new housing was built a new population moved in who mostly work in the Paris area 26 while the town lost almost all of its remaining industrial base when the Guilleminot factories shut down in 1992 Population editGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Historical populationYearPop p a 196810 246 197510 552 0 42 198210 065 0 67 199011 341 1 50 199910 902 0 44 200711 096 0 22 201211 215 0 21 201710 863 0 64 Source INSEE 27 Monuments and tourist attractions editChateau de Chantilly edit Main article Chateau de Chantilly The chateau de Chantilly was built for the House of Montmorency then was home to the Condes and finally to the Duke of Aumale fifth son of Louis Philippe He willed it to the Institute of France Le chateau has two parts the Petit Chateau and the Chateau Neuf The first was built in 1560 by the architect Jean Bullant for the constable Anne de Montmorency The interior decoration goes back to the 18th century for the larger apartments and was carried out by Jean Aubert Jean Baptiste Huet and Jean Baptiste Oudry The smaller apartments redone in the 19th century are on the ground floor The Chateau Neuf was built by architect Honore Daumet between 1876 and 1882 on the site of the portion of the older building destroyed at the beginning of the 19th century It contains paint galleries libraries and the chapel A gallery built by architecte Felix Duban in the 1840s links the two buildings The chateau is surrounded by a 115 hectare 285 acre park which includes 25 hectares 62 acres of water gardens The parks includes large formal gardens designed by Andre Le Notre the Anglo Chinese garden installed between 1772 and 1774 in the center of which is the Hameau de Chantilly the English garden installed in 1817 around the temple of Venus on the western side and near the forest the La Cabotiere and de Sylvie parks The entire estate was designated a historic monument by the decrees of 24 October and December 1988 Musee Conde edit Main article Musee Conde The Conde Museum in the chateau has one of the oldest collections of historic art in France and its collection of paintings is only surpassed in France by the Musee du Louvre The museum also contains a collection of 1 300 manuscripts including the daybook Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry As a condition of its bequest to the Institut de France by the Duke of Aumale the collection s presentation cannot be modified nor can it be loaned out so it is a permanent fixture of Chantilly The Great Stables edit The Grandes Ecuries which contain the Living Museum of the Horse are among the most visited horse racing sites in the world They were built between 1719 and 1740 by Jean Aubert They are 186 meters 610 long with a central dome 38 meters 125 high and could accommodate 240 horses and 500 dogs for the daily rides to hunt Dressage demonstrations or re enactments are held daily in the quarry Horse shows are regularly held beneath the dome Porte Saint Denis edit The porte Saint Denis is part of an unfinished pavilion originally intended to provide symmetry with the current entrance of the Great Stables on the other side of the open air stables When the Duke of Bourbon died in 1740 only this portion remained unfinished when construction stopped This pavilion was to mark the entrance to the burgeoning city Its name came from the old land holdings of the Abbey of Saint Denis which was once very close to the chateau Urban development edit nbsp Officer housing in the rue du ConnetableAs a city Chantilly is less than 250 years old The oldest part is the rue du Connetable which began in 1727 as a planned allotment called the officials housing allocated from part of the chateau estate These buildings are now numbered 25 through 67 on the rue du Connetable The rest of the neighborhood was sold to the end of the main street where the Conde hospice stood before the French Revolution After 1799 the town spread over the old footprint of the chateau gardens with street names recalling the different gardens and sometimes following their old paths The rue des Potagers rue de la Faisanderie and rue des Cascades are examples of this i e Vegetable Street Pheasantry Street and Waterfall Street Street numbers here begin from the chateau rather than from the place Omer Vallon as in other neighborhoods Development took the form of town houses small 19th century buildings and other villas surrounded by gardens Traces also exist of old stables dating from the beginnings of the racehorse community at the start of the 19th century Along the avenue du marechal Joffre development was tied to the Paris road and the arrival of the railway The station is at the end of the avenue Here small buildings and villas built in the 19th and 20th century reflect the residential nature the town took on in this period The area has become progressively more built up as villas and their gardens were replaced with private residences and master houses were transformed into multi family dwellings Chantilly has three outer neighborhoods nbsp Pathway reserved for horses in the Bois Saint Denis neighborhoodThe Bois Saint Denis 28 29 lies south of town between the Paris road and the railway This neighborhood grew out of the construction of stables which got further and further from the center of town as land became more scarce Forest parcels belonging to the Duke of Aumale began to be developed in 1890 While this neighborhood was originally within Gouvieux it became part of Chantilly in 1928 It was then composed of brick stables trainer residences and lodgings for the lads and jockeys For a long time it was almost entirely devoted to racing but over time beginning in the 1960s many stables were demolished or transformed into apartment buildings or housing subdivisions Building codes now specifically protect this heritage and these racing activities The Verdun area is at the site of the old train station for the racetrack see the article on the Gare de Chantilly Gouvieux in the French Wikipedia and lies between the railway and the forest When the old station closed around 1950 the land was used for apartment buildings originally limited to railway workers Much of it still belongs to the SNCF The city s two high schools are nearby North of town neighborhoods lie on terraces overlooking the Nonette These are made up of public housing le quartier Lefebure small subdivisions and privately owned multifamily residences residence Sylvie residence du Coq Chantant or du Castel built during the 1960s and 1970s These neighborhoods have developed their own school and church as well as other amenities used by the city as a whole such as open space and a stadium nbsp Guilleminot factoryAn intermediate area between the north end of town and the downtown area contains green zones such as the Grand Canal the Saint Jean canal and lying between them in the meadow of the Grand Canal the community gardens in the area known as La Canardiere The few buildings in this area are tied to Chantilly s old industrial base such as the Francois Richard Lenoir factory and the old Guilleminot factory and its outbuildings There are no specific protections for historic buildings or neighborhood preservation nor is there a historic district such as in Senlis but the town has local development codes and urban development plans Much of the land 69 in Chantilly is forest so taking the racecourse into account the city only manages about 25 of its land much of it around the historic monuments and therefore subject to architectural constraints 30 Notable residents edit nbsp Paul Cezanne Allee du Bois Bourillon a Chantilly 1888Pierre d Orgemont built the first known chateau Francois Vatel 1631 1671 maitre d hotel and believed to be the inventor of Chantilly cream died in Chantilly Henri Jules de Bourbon Conde 1643 1709 founded the parish of Chantilly Louis IV Henri de Bourbon Conde 1692 1741 statesman and lord of Chantilly built the Great Stables Pierre Joseph Candeille 1744 1827 composer and singer died at Chantilly Bertrand Bessieres 1773 1854 general under Napoleon lived and died in Chantilly Henriette Meric Lalande 1798 1867 et Laure Cinti Damoreau 1801 1863 singers retired in Chantilly and died there Henri d Orleans Duke of Aumale 1822 1897 fifth son of Louis Philippe I last lord of Chantilly Leopold Delisle 1826 1910 French historian and librarian retired in the commune and occasionally acted as librarian of the Musee Conde Abel Hermant 1862 1950 writer and academic retired in Chantilly after his imprisonment for collaboration 31 Alfred Heurtaux 1893 1985 soldier and Resistance fighter died in the commune Princess Nadejda Petrovna of Russia 1898 1988 Russian princess retired in Chantilly Emilien Amaury 1909 1977 founder of the newspaper Le Parisien died of a horse riding accident in the forest and was buried in the cimetiere Saint Pierre 31 Jean Neuberth 1915 1996 painter died at Chantilly Jean Bruce 1921 1963 author of spy novels creator of OSS 117 lived in the avenue du General Leclerc and was buried in the cimetiere Saint Pierre 31 Births in Chantilly edit Anne de Montmorency 1492 1567 grand maitre of France then constable Louis Antoine de Bourbon Conde Duke of Enghien 1772 1804 Antoine Guillemet 1841 1918 painter Jean de Laborde 1878 1977 French admiral who participated in the scuttling of the French fleet at Toulon Alfred Aston 1912 2003 French soccer playerEconomy editThe economy of Chantilly has always been intimately associated with the French aristocracy The most important economic activity even today is horse racing which sprang up in the area due to the nobles who lived nearby The other major economic center is on tourism Slightly more than half of the local population participates in the labor market and when residents younger than fifteen and older than 64 are excluded the figure rises to 80 Much of the active workforce 41 is employed outside of the Oise 32 almost all of them in Ile de France either in Paris proper or in the area around the Charles de Gaulle Airport This proportion has been gradually increasing over time Approximately 7 000 commuters travel into Ile de France every day 33 There are no large employers in Chantilly or its immediate environs The largest is the Lycee Jean Rostand followed by the city itself and the information technology company EDI None has more than 250 employees 33 On 1 January 2007 the city had 801 business 193 of them retail 34 The unemployment rate at the most recent census was 8 4 vs 10 7 for the Oise as a whole For labor market purposes Chantilly is considered part of the Sud Oise which along with Amiens is the largest labor pool in Picardy 35 Horse racing edit Chantilly is the largest center of horse training activities in France with 2 633 horses 2 620 of them thoroughbreds lodged in approximately a hundred training stables This represents 70 of the race horses in Paris The next closest at Maisons Laffitte only has about 800 About two thousand area residents are directly or indirectly employed in this field Given the real estate crunch inside city limits nowadays stables can only be found in the Bois St Denis neighborhood where there are thirty which specialise in gallop Fifty four others also specializing in gallop can be found in Lamorlaye Gouvieux Coye la Foret and to a lesser extent at Avilly Saint Leonard Fifty nine jockeys live in Chantilly and 109 in the rest of the municipal area 36 Trainers in the area include Criquette Head Maarek Freddy Head Pascal Bary Andre Fabre Marcel Rolland Elie Lellouche Nicolas Clement Alain de Royer Dupre and those attached to the stables of Karim Aga Khan IV Jockeys in the area include Dominique Bœuf Christophe Patrice Lemaire Olivier Peslier Thierry Thuilliez and Thierry Jarnet France Galop edit The stables affiliated with France Galop use a number of installations that the organisation manages and maintains 60 permanent and 30 seasonal employees work at these installations which encompass 1 900 hectares 7 sq mi Among these installations is the des Aigles track at Gouvieux as well as others at Lamorlaye and Coye la Foret which has thirty odd trainers working in a 60 hectare 150 acre facility as well as the 15 hectare 40 acre track at Avilly Saint Leonard France Galop also manages 47 kilometres 30 miles of trails covering 1 500 hectares 5 sq mi in Chantilly Forest which are strictly limited to horses at certain times of day 37 In all the organisation manages 120 hectares 300 acres of grass 120 kilometres 75 miles of sand trail and one dirt trail used 365 days a year regardless of the weather which translates to 33 000 gallops a year including 2 000 at the racecourse alone 38 Equine businesses edit A number of professionals and businesses specializing in racehorses have grown up in the Chantilly area Two prominent horse transportation companies are based in Lamorlaye and Gouvieux respectively 39 Three veterinarians within the municipal boundaries specialize in horses and another five in the adjacent communes 40 Chantilly has one farrier and there are another four nearby Similarly there is one saddler and another seven based outside town 41 Chantilly has two racehorse dealers another five are based in the surrounding area 42 A horse racing school AFASEC s The Windmill is based in Gouvieux and provides instruction to 185 jockeys and trainees many of whom are housed in a facility in Chantilly proper 43 Finally there are plans to build a biomass plant that will use the manure generated by the stables 44 Racecourse edit The racecourse hosts 25 meets and 197 races every year including the prestigious Prix du Jockey Club and Prix de Diane It is one of six Parisian racecourses managed by France Galop although it is owned by the Institut de France When it was threatened with closing 24 million euros were raised to modernize it by a public interest group that included the mayor s office France Galop the Institute of France the Communaute de communes de l aire cantilienne CCAC an intergovernmental commission of Chantilly area governments the Oise council the Picary regional council and Prince Karim Aga Khan Work was completed in 2007 and included a new ring repairs and modernization of the stands a scale and a new parking area It now receives 40 000 visitors a year 45 Tourism edit Tourism in Chantilly centers on the Domaine de Chantilly which owns the chateau and associated lands The chateau itself had roughly a quarter million visitors in 2007 while the Living Museum of the Horse drew 149 000 46 The other big tourist draw is Chantilly Forest which received as many as four million visits yearly This makes it the 7th most visited forest in the Paris region 47 Most of the visitors are day excursionists Unlike Versailles and Fontainebleau foreign tourists account for only 15 of the traffic which can at peak times reach 20 000 simultaneous visitors to the various Domaine properties 48 Every year an international show jumping competition the Chantilly Jumping which is part of the Global Champions Tour is held in 2 arenas in the middle of the racecourse 49 Chantilly lies within the Parc naturel regional Oise Pays de France The medieval city of Senlis and its cathedral the abbeys of Chaalis Moncel and Royaumont and the priory at Saint Leu d Esserent are nearby Natural attractions include the forests of Halatte and Ermenonville and Parc Jean Jacques Rousseau in Ermenonville Nearby theme parks like La Mer de sable and Parc Asterix also draw visitors to the area In 2005 due to difficulties the Institute of France was experiencing with the management of the domain the more important elements of the domain were taken over by a non profit corporation created and supported financially by the Aga Khan charged with economic development restoration and the development of tourism 50 51 Business tourism is another important factor Proximity to Paris and to the Charles de Gaulle airport combine with the high quality of local hotel properties make it a prime conference destination More than two thousand are held there every year Chantilly and its immediate vicinity have three four star hotels the Dolce in Vineuil Saint Firmin the Montvillargenne in Gouvieux the Mont Royal a little further away at La Chapelle en ServalThere are also four three star hotels A conference center run by the Capgemini corporation is also located in the immediate vicinity in Gouvieux 52 Another four star hotel is being built in the Rue du Connetable near the Jeu de Paume with an additional luxury residence planned for Avilly Saint Leonard 53 Chantilly Arts and Elegance Richard Mille edit The automobile elegance contest of Chantilly Arts amp Elegance Richard Mille takes place in the castle similar to the Concorso d Eleganza Villa d Este in Italy Pebble Beach Concours d Elegance in California and Amelia Island Concours d Elegance in Florida Communication and transportation editRoads edit The old king s road that once connected Pierrefitte sur Seine to Dunkirk by way of Amiens bisects Chantilly from north to south Formerly known as route nationale 16 this road has been renamed departmental road 1016 Trucks are not illegal on this road but signs to the north and south of town suggest taking the A1 or A16 instead The D924a connects to the Flanders road the old route nationale 17 at La Chapelle en Serval The D924 runs to Senlis Trucks are banned on both of these roads which connect to the A1 The speed limit on D924a is 70 km h 45 mph for its entire length through the commune since it passes through Chantilly Forest which has many deer crossings Rail and public transportation edit nbsp Train station in ChantillyThe Chantilly Gouvieux train station was put into service in 1859 on the Paris Lille railway It is served by the SNCF via the TER Hauts de France network Express trains reach Paris Nord in 22 minutes and Creil in seven 54 The station is also served by line D of the Ile de France RER In 2006 920 000 trips took place between Chantilly and Paris Nord A small public bus network Desserte urbaine cantilienne DUC links the Lefebure neighborhood to Bois St Denis by way of the train station A branch goes past the chateau and the Saint Pierre cemetery Passengers ride for free Airports and airport access edit Chantilly is 30 km 19 miles from Charles de Gaulle Airport and 54 km 34 miles from the Beauvais Tille Airport There is no direct route to either by public transportation nbsp Les Aigles horse training center was requisitioned during World War II and used as an airfieldAn airfield named aerodrome de la Vidamee Chantilly was opened in 1910 in Courteuil and served as a military air base during World War I 55 It has since disappeared Another airfield known as terrain de Chantilly Les Aigles was created during World War II by requisitioning the Les Aigles horse training center in Gouvieux It was occupied during the Battle of France by the chase group I 1 from the Etampes Mondesir air base 56 Trails edit nbsp Ponds in Commelles near Coye la ForetTwo hiking trails cross the commune The GR 11 circles the greater Paris area and runs between Senlis and Saint Maximin It cuts through the parc de Sylvie on the chateau grounds goes through the Porte Saint Denis and descends to the Saint Jean canal running alongside it until it cuts across the neighborhood known as Coq chantant Crowing Rooster The GR 12 which runs from Paris to Amsterdam goes from Senlis through the south end of town towards the Commelles ponds then reaches Coye la Foret The GR 1 known as Tour de Paris runs along the southeastern edge of town on the south bank of the Commelles ponds Chantilly Forest is criss crossed with many paths which are barred to pedestrians between 6 am and 1 pm to allow horses to be trained Chantilly finished a network of bike paths in June 2008 which allow access by bike to Gouvieux Vineuil Saint Firmin et Avilly Saint Leonard Sights editThe surrounding Chantilly Forest The Chateau de Chantilly The Chantilly Racecourse The Musee CondeInternational relations editChantilly is twinned with nbsp Watermael Boitsfort Belgium nbsp Uberlingen Germany nbsp Epsom and Ewell UKClimate editThe climate in Val d Oise is comparable to that of the northern part of Ile de France it has been described as falling somewhere between the oceanic climate of Brest on the coast and the continental climate of Strasbourg Rainfall is relatively light and with moderately heavy rainfall in spring and early summer then again in the autumn which is typical of oceanic climates but storms are of the continental variety 57 Climate data for Chantilly Oise FranceMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearMean daily maximum C F 9 48 10 2 50 4 10 1 50 2 14 1 57 4 20 9 69 6 21 5 70 7 24 3 75 7 22 8 73 0 19 3 66 7 14 9 58 8 10 2 50 4 4 8 40 6 15 2 59 3 Mean daily minimum C F 3 5 38 3 1 2 34 2 3 7 38 7 4 6 40 3 10 50 11 5 52 7 13 55 13 7 56 7 8 6 47 5 6 5 43 7 4 3 39 7 0 3 31 5 6 7 44 0 Average precipitation mm inches 53 2 1 38 1 5 91 3 6 53 2 1 64 2 5 24 0 9 34 1 3 71 2 8 29 1 1 76 3 0 47 1 9 31 1 2 611 24 Source Meteo France Creil weather station 2008See also edit nbsp France portalChantilly lace Chantilly Forest Chateau de Chantilly Communes of the Oise department Chantilly JumpingReferences edit Repertoire national des elus les maires in French data gouv fr Plateforme ouverte des donnees publiques francaises 13 September 2022 Populations legales 2021 The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies 28 December 2023 Chantilly Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d Retrieved 9 December 2019 Edouard Launet 12 September 2007 Le trou d ou sort Paris Liberation retrieved 22 July 2009 Carte archeologique de la Gaule 60 Oise Carte archeologique de la Gaule L Oise editions de la MSH Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres 1995 pp 202 203 ISBN 2 87754 039 1 Gerad Mahieux 2008 Les origines du chateau et de la seigneurie de Chantilly vol 1 Cahiers de Chantilly Macon 1908 p 10 16 Macon 1908 p 30 31 Macon 10 12 and 23 25 Macon 1909 1910 pp 15 and 57 Macon 1908 pp 16 19 and 24 26 Macon 1909 1910 p 97 114 Macon 1912 p 26 35 44 62 and 67 Blay 2006 p 273 chapter entitled Une culture urbaine sous influence parisienne et anglaise Chantilly sous la botte 1870 1871 Association de sauvegarde de Chantilly et de son environnement 1990 Blay 2006 p 138 chapter entitled Evolution des structures et specialisation des emplois Jean Pierre Blay 1992 Industrie hippique immigration anglaise et structures sociales a Chantilly au xixe siecle Revue Europeenne des Migrations Internationales Revue europeenne de migrations internationales 8 2 2 121 132 doi 10 3406 remi 1992 1324 Blay 2006 p 179 207 chapter entitled Loisirs mondains vie sportive et snobisme de classe a la Belle epoque Blay 2006 p 63 77 chapter entitled Le duc d Aumale et Chantilly bienveillance princiere et perennite du domaine Chronologie de Chantilly association de sauvegarde de Chantilly et de son environnement January 2007 archived from the original on 23 February 2011 retrieved 20 July 2009 Au sujet de Chantilly pendant la Premiere Guerre mondiale Chantilly en 1914 1918 photographies inedites de Georges et Marcel Vicaire PDF Ville de Chantilly Chateau de Chantilly 2008 ISBN 978 2 9532603 0 4 archived from the original PDF on 7 September 2011 Bernard Chambon 2008 Le Grand quartier general a Chantilly 1914 1917 vol 1 Cahiers de Chantilly pp 59 103 Francois Cochet 2006 6 8 decembre 1915 Chantilly la Grande Guerre change de rythme Revue historique des armees 242 242 16 25 Departement d histoire locale du centre culturel Marguerite Dembreville de Chantilly 2008 Les p tites camoufleuses de Chantilly Notice sur l atelier de camouflage de l armee francaise en 1917 18 a Chantilly Oise PDF archived from the original PDF on 13 November 2013 retrieved 9 January 2013 L abbe Charpentier 1882 1944 l association de sauvegarde de Chantilly et de son environnement January 2007 archived from the original on 5 September 2009 retrieved 20 July 2009 L Oise et ses cantons Chantilly PDF Insee 2006 retrieved 20 July 2009 Population en historique depuis 1968 INSEE Michel Bouchet 2004 Le Quartier du Bois Saint Denis d hier a aujourd hui Etudes cantiliennes Association pour la sauvegarde de Chantilly et de son environnement p 23 Jean Pierre Blay 2006 Le bois Saint Denis une quartier conquis par Chantilly pour le cheval 1891 1930 Les Princes et les jockeys vol 1 Atlantica pp 90 105 ISBN 2 84394 903 3 chambre regionale des comptes de Picardie 16 September 2003 Rapport d observations definitives sur la gestion de la commune de Chantilly PDF Cour des Comptes site des Juridictions financieres archived from the original PDF on 23 February 2011 a b c Muriel Le Guen Guide pour la visite des cimetieres cantiliens mairie de Chantilly Dossier statistique sur la commune de Chantilly archive sur site de l Insee juin 2009 Consulte le 22 juillet 2009 a b L Oise et ses cantons Chantilly archive sur site de l Insee 2006 Consulte le 20 juillet 2009 Dossier statistique sur la commune de Chantilly sur site de l Insee juin 2009 Consulte le 22 juillet 2009 Carte des zones d emploi et nombre d emplois au 31 decembre 2006 sur www eco picardie net Consulte le 22 juillet 2009 Entraineurs et jockeys adherents a l Association general des jockeys de galop en France recenses dans le Guide pratique edite par l Association des entraineurs de Galop edition 2008 Le centre d entrainement de Chantilly sur site du journal France Galop Retrieved 22 July 2009 Guide pratique Association des entraineurs de galop 2008 p 251 252 Chiffres 2006 STH Hippavia sur www sth hipavia com Consulte le 7 aout 2009 la plus ancienne originaire de Chantilly et STC Horse de Gouvieux Liste des adherents a l association sur site de l association veterinaire equine francaise Consulte le 22 juillet 2009 Pages jaunes Yellow Pages Coming to France liste des membres sur site de l association francaise des courtiers en chevaux de galop AFC Consulte le 22 juillet 2009 L ecole Le Moulin a Vent Chantilly Gouvieux archive sur site de l ecole des courses hippiques Consulte le 22 juillet 2009 Marie Persidat L usine de methanisation revient au Mont de Po Le Parisien 3 juillet 2009 texte integral archive page consultee le 28 juillet 2009 Vivre a Chantilly L hippodrome de Chantilly no 90 p 4 5 juillet aout 2009 Touriscopie 2007 les chiffres du tourisme dans l Oise 2007 retrieved 22 July 2009 La frequentation des forets publiques en Ile de France CREDOC July 2000 Sabine Gignoux 13 May 2009 Karim Aga Khan chef spirituel des ismaeliens 1 2 A Chantilly comme ailleurs la culture est creatrice de ressources La Croix p 23 Homepage Jumping Chantilly jumping chantilly com Retrieved 23 June 2017 La Fondation pour la sauvegarde et le developpement du domaine de Chantilly Institut de France Gregoire Allix Emmanuel de Roux 26 March 2005 L Aga Khan remet en selle le domaine de Chantilly Le Monde retrieved 1 July 2009 Page d accueil Les Fontaines Avilly Saint Leonard le complexe hotelier prevu pour la fin 2011 Le Parisien edition Oise 26 February 2009 Horaires des trains Paris Chantilly Creil PDF SNCF 2012 retrieved 8 January 2012 Patrick Serou L Aerodrome de la Vidamee retrieved 20 July 2009 Frederic Gondron 1999 Un aerodrome peu connu Les Aigles Gouvieux Chantilly aout 1939 juin 1940 Bulletin de la societe historique de Gouvieux Oise no 10 The data below is for 2008 France Climate Encyclopaedia Britannica 29 June 2023Bibliography editGustave Macon Histoire des edifices de culte de Chantilly in Comite archeologique de Senlis Comptes rendus et memoires annees 1900 01 Senlis Imprimerie de Charles Duriez 4th edition vol IV 1902 p 179 260 ISSN 1162 8820 Gustave Macon Histoire de Chantilly in Comptes rendus et Memoires annees 1908 a 1912 Comite archeologique de Senlis Senlis original edition Res Universis Amiens second edition 1909 1913 reprinted 1989 reproduction of the original edition originale four volumes in one ISBN 2 87760 170 6 ISSN 1162 8820 unequaled summary of the city s history from its origins to the 19th centuryLes origines volume 1 1908 Online Formation et developpement 1692 1800 volume 2 1909 1910 online Administration et vie au xviiie siecle volume 3 1911 online La Revolution l Empire la Restauration volume 4 1912 online dd dd Jean Pierre Babelon and Georges Fressy Chantilly Scala 1999 247 p ISBN 2 86656 203 8 Focuses on the chateau dd Jean Pierre Blay Les Princes et les jockeys Biarritz Atlantica 2006 630 p ISBN 2 84394 903 3 Thesis on Chantilly history in the 19th and early 20th century focuses on relationship with horse racingLa Ville du cheval souverain volume 1 Vie sportive et sociabilite urbaine volume 2 dd dd Isabelle Dumont Fillon Chantilly Alan Sutton Memoire en images collection 1999 ISBN 2 84253 301 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chantilly nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Chantilly Chantilly s portal in French Museum of the Horse Businesses in Chantilly Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chantilly Oise amp oldid 1189150057, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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