History
Crépy-en-Valois was founded in the tenth century by the count of Valois and served as the capital of the Valois county and duchy. During the Middle Ages, the city profited from the Champagne fairs, markets for leather, cloth, spices, and other goods. Then, the Valois and the town of Crépy-en-Valois were annexed by the monarchy, and administration was given to a member of the royal family. During the war against the English in fourteenth century, the town was destroyed. In 1828, Crépy-en-Valois annexed the commune of Bouillant. In 1861, a railway station was built, and the town experienced economic growth. On 1 September 1914, the 13th Infantry Brigade of 5th Division, part of the British Expeditionary Force, fought a rearguard action here against the advancingPopulation
Transport
Crépy-en-Valois is served by Crépy-en-Valois station on the Transilien Paris-Nord suburban rail line and on the regional rail line to Laon. Travel by train will take about forty five minutes from Gare du Nord.Historic monuments
Crépy-en-Valois has a total of thirteen '' monuments historiques'', two classed and eleven inscribed. It had a fourteenth that was destroyed during World War II. * Priory of Saint-Arnoul, a medieval Cluniac monastery founded by the old counts of Valois, inscribed in 1943 and 1979. *A collegiate church of Saint Thomas of Canterbury from the 12th century, classed in 1875. *Château Saint-Aubin, 10th–13th centuries, inscribed 3 April 1926. * Église Saint-Denis, a 12th-century parish church, inscribed 29 November 1977. * Église Saint-Martin de Bouillant, a 15th-century parish church, inscribed 23 February 1951. *Hôtel de la Rose, built in 1537, inscribed 8 February 2001. *Maison Le Corandon, 16th century, inscribed 7 November 1979. *A 16th-century house at 18 rue de la Cloche, inscribed 4 August 1978. *Hôtel Saint-Joseph, from 1649, inscribed 8 May 1933. *Fond-Marin, a 17th-century hydraulic nymphaeum and laundry, inscribed 14 May 2003. *Maison Quatre Saisons, façade 1758, inscribed 8 May 1933. *Hôtel d'Orléans, also called Maison Jeanne d'Arc, a 14th-century house, inscribed 30 March 1978. *The ruins of the Paris gate, built in 1788–92, classed on 26 May 1951. *A 13th-century house, 9 rue Nationale, inscribed 8 May, was destroyed in World War II.See also
*References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crepyenvalois Communes of Oise