Livilliers
Livilliers is a common French, located in the department of the Val-d'Oise and the area Île-de-France. Its inhabitants are called Livillois (be).
Geography
The commune is built to 35 km in the North-West of Paris, on the cereal plate of the French Vexin.
History
The name comes from the German name Laitu , Latinized in Ledus , and of low-Latin villare , field or firm. In the past Linvillerium , which one can translate by Linivilleriem : “village with far where one cultivates much flax”.Dependence of the Saint Martin's day abbey of Pontoise, the village was set up in Paroisse only in 1175.
Administration
Demography
Monuments and places of visit
the church Our-Lady-of-the-Nativity-and-Saint-Hackney carriage was set up as from the 13th century. But only the chorus and the Western frontage go up at that time, the building having been largely altered at the 16th century. A porch is built in 1560. The turn-bell-tower square is surmounted by a high covered slate arrow which was added only to the 19th century. The bell gone back to 1676 had as a godfather and godmother the Grand Cop and the duchess of Longueville. Inside, a Virgin with the Child out of wooden dates from the 12th century; a Retable, rather sober, goes back to the 18th century.
See too
Internal bonds
- French Vexin
- Common of the Val-d'Oise