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French Vexin | |
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Fields of the Vexin and the Seine viewed from the heights of Fontenay-Saint-Père. | |
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Area | |
• Total | 1,400 km2 (500 sq mi) |
Population (1999) | |
• Total | 100,000 |
The French Vexin is a former province and a natural region of France, located in the northwest of Île-de-France and extending slightly into Hauts-de-France. It spans the departments of Val-d'Oise, Yvelines, and Oise. Pontoise, now part of the Cergy-Pontoise agglomeration alongside Cergy, contrasts with the rural character of the French Vexin, despite being its historic capital.
Geography
[edit]The French Vexin, much like its counterpart the Norman Vexin, is predominantly a limestone plateau covered with loam, characterized by open spaces and an elevation ranging from approximately 100 to 140 metres (330 to 460 ft). It is topped by wooded hills and primarily devoted to agriculture (large-scale cereal farming). The region is distinctly bounded to the south by the meanders of the Seine, which have carved steep valleys in some areas. Roughly rectangular in shape, measuring about 40 by 35 kilometres (25 by 22 mi), it is geographically defined by relatively entrenched waterways:
- to the south by the Seine;
- to the east by the Oise;
- to the west by the Epte;
- to the north by the valleys of the Esches, the Troesne , or simply by the cuesta of the Vexin.

In the Oise, the boundaries of the French Vexin are theoretically marked by the cuesta of the Vexin, separating the Vexin plateau from the neighboring Pays de Thelle plateau. However, some villages beyond this boundary—on the slopes of the cuesta, in the valleys of the Troesne or Esches, or even further—are often considered part of the Vexin, sometimes bearing the name itself.[1] Among these villages outside the strict geographical limits, a few rarely exhibit the typical landscape and architectural features of the Vexin.[2] Nonetheless, they are included in the count under the administrative organization section below. The northern and eastern Picard boundaries of the French Vexin are the least defined, with the others clearly outlined by significant rivers (Seine, Oise, and Epte), leading to uncertainties in classifying certain communes, a common challenge when delineating natural regions.
The interior of the plateau is dominated by a series of inliers and watered by several streams, tributaries of the aforementioned rivers:
- the Sausseron and the Viosne , tributaries of the Oise;
- the Montcient and the Aubette de Meulan, direct tributaries of the Seine;
- the Aubette de Magny and the Troesne, tributaries of the Epte.
The valleys vary widely in appearance, ranging from broad alluvial plains like the Aubette de Magny to long, relatively entrenched valleys like the Viosne.
Seven of the fourteen hills form a ridge line separating the northern plateau from the Seine valley to the south, stretching from the Massif de l'Hautil in the east to the former forest of Arthies in the west. The remaining hills are scattered and isolated across the plateau. Most consist of gypsum capped with a hard, barren gritstone, making them largely wooded. Some denuded hills host villages on their summits (Cléry-en-Vexin, Grisy-les-Plâtres) or slopes (Bréançon).
Gypsum was mined as early as the High Middle Ages, notably at Grisy-les-Plâtres.
The Buttes de Rosne , in the north, mark the highest point of the Vexin and the second highest in the entire Île-de-France region, at 216 metres (709 ft).
The region is overwhelmingly rural with a low population density, except for the urbanized valleys of the Seine and Oise, which form its southern and eastern boundaries and are influenced by nearby urban centers. These include Rouen to the west, Paris to the east, and closer towns like Vernon and Mantes-la-Jolie to the south, as well as the new town of Cergy-Pontoise to the southeast, with a population of 200,000 habitants and over 90,000 jobs, encompassing the historic Vexin capital, Pontoise.
The main town of the neighboring Norman Vexin, Gisors, has about 10,000 habitants and exerts some economic influence over the northern French Vexin. However, its location in the neighboring Eure department and Normandy region reduces its pull. The only notable agglomerations within the French Vexin are generally on the plateau’s periphery: the small town of Chaumont-en-Vexin in the northeast, the Cergy-Pontoise agglomeration in the east, and Meulan-en-Yvelines and Limay in the south. Magny-en-Vexin, due to its relatively central position, is emerging as the modest capital of the agricultural plateau, with a pronounced commercial role.
The landscape is marked by a significant concentration of the population in villages, a trend that has intensified over centuries, with isolated hamlets and farms accounting for just 5% of the total population.
The primary communication route is the Route Nationale 14, linking Paris to Rouen via Pontoise. Its fairly straight path follows an ancient Roman road, the Chaussée Jules César.

Geology
[edit]The geology of the French Vexin, part of the Paris Basin, is characterized by its sedimentary nature.
The subsurface consists of several stacked rock types. The oldest is the white Campanian chalk, dating back about 80 million years and roughly 80 meters thick, exposed in valley bottoms. Above it lies a limestone layer from the Montian (65 million years old), the quintessential Vexin building stone, followed by clay and sand layers from the Ypresian, including the impermeable Sparnacian clays (5 to 15 meters thick), which create spring lines and swampy valley floors. This is overlain by the Cuisian sand, 10 to 30 meters thick.
Next comes the substantial Lutetian limestone, 20 to 40 meters thick, forming the plateau’s foundation and accounting for karst phenomena. The succeeding Bartonian layers (40 million years old) alternate between sandstone and Auversian sand, Saint-Ouen limestone, and Marinesian sands, ranging from 5 to 30 meters thick.
Communication network
[edit]Aside from the Seine valley in the south, traversed by several major communication routes, and to a lesser extent the Oise valley, the French Vexin is crossed only by relatively minor roads, partly explaining its prolonged isolation. Only the Route Nationale 14 runs through it, recently upgraded to dual carriageway up to the Magny-en-Vexin exit. The sole railway crossing the plateau is the Saint-Denis–Dieppe railway, a secondary outer-ring line mainly used for commuter travel and weekend trips.
History
[edit]The term Vexin derives from the Veliocasses, a Gallic people whose territory formed the diocese of Rouen—their chief settlement—and a pagus with a count documented by 750. The County of Vexin also served as an “advocate” for the Abbey of Saint-Denis.
Middle Ages
[edit]
The Vexin was divided into two parts—the French Vexin in the east and the Norman Vexin in the west—under the Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte on 11 July 911. King Charles III the Simple ceded to the Norman leader Rollo the territory between the Epte in the north, the Avre in the south, and the sea, laying the groundwork for the future Duchy of Normandy, which included part of the Vexin, while the remainder stayed under the French king’s control.
In 1031, Duke Robert I of Normandy aided King Henry I against a revolt led by the dowager queen, Constance of Arles, and was rewarded with the French Vexin between the Epte and Oise, including Pontoise.[3]
The County of Vexin was held by a prominent feudal lord, Raoul de Gouy, who also controlled the counties of Amiens and Valois. In 1063, Gauthier III de Gouy was poisoned and died a prisoner of William the Bastard. His cousin Ralph IV of Valois succeeded him, and his only son, Simon de Vexin, entered a monastery in 1077. In 1082,[4] King Philip I of France seized the opportunity to reclaim the French Vexin, previously granted by his father to the Duke of Normandy.
This division sparked centuries of conflict between the two neighbors, especially after the Duke of Normandy became King of England in 1066, fueling the ambitions of both rulers.
In 1087, William the Conqueror, back in Normandy, pillaged the French Vexin during the summer, clashing with King Philip I, and suffered a fatal injury during the assault on Mantes.[4][a]
The Epte valley was then heavily fortified, with numerous military structures built by both the French king and the Norman duke. Notable surviving examples include Gisors, Neaufles-Saint-Martin, and Château-sur-Epte on the Norman side, and Trie-Château and La Roche-Guyon on the French side, along with the castle of Pontoise, the historic Vexin capital, where King Louis VI the Fat often resided. Nonetheless, these fortifications did little to prevent over a century of pillaging and devastation in the region.
In 1193, Philip Augustus captured Gisors, gaining control of the entire Duchy of Normandy a decade later after Richard the Lionheart’s death, and stripped the last major Vexin feudal lord, the Count of Meulan, who had backed the English king, of his lands.
In 1195, Philip Augustus permanently annexed the French Vexin to the royal domain.
The 13th century and the first half of the 14th century were a time of peace and prosperity in the Vexin, marked by the construction of numerous churches, extensive land clearing, and a significant population increase. Pontoise, with 2,150 fiscal hearths in 1332, ranked among the kingdom’s most prominent cities.
During the Hundred Years’ War, the French Vexin was a battleground, notably during the Crécy campaign, which ravaged the region. The Black Death struck in 1348, killing 1,000 people in Pontoise. The Great Jacquerie, originating in the Beauvaisis, quickly spread to the Vexin countryside.
By the early 15th century, Pontoise and many villages lay in ruins, crops were neglected due to a lack of able-bodied men, and forests reclaimed cleared lands. The civil war between Armagnacs and Burgundians followed, with the latter garrisoning Pontoise in 1417. However, the English seized the city by surprise on 31 July 1419. The Vexin remained under English control for seventeen years until 1449, when the château de Gisors was finally retaken, ending the war in the region.
“I have seen with my own eyes the vast plains of Champagne, Brie, Beauce..., Maine, Perche, Norman and French Vexin, Beauvaisis... deserted, fallow, depopulated, overgrown with brambles and bushes...” wrote Thomas Basin, Bishop of Lisieux, in his chronicle of King Charles VII of France.
With peace restored, a rebuilding fervor emerged, ushering in the era of Flamboyant Gothic. Wealthy bourgeois acquired lordships, replacing fortified castles with pleasure residences.[5]
Renaissance
[edit]
By around 1550, the French Vexin regained its 1332 population of approximately 25,000 people. Yet this renewed prosperity was short-lived, as the Wars of Religion erupted, spanning much of the latter half of the 16th century.
The Estates General of 1560 were convened in Pontoise by Chancellor Michel de L'Hôpital, but failed to restore peace. Several Vexin lords rejected the Reformation, turning the region into a stronghold of the Catholic League.
King Henry III, accompanied by Henry of Navarre, later Henry IV of France, laid siege to Pontoise on 8 July 1589, after retaking Meulan. The city surrendered, but Henry III was assassinated at Saint-Cloud weeks later. By 1590, the Duke of Mayenne, leader of the Holy League, retook Pontoise.
In 1594, Henry IV abjured Protestantism, prompting Pontoise to open its gates and restoring religious peace to the Vexin.
Here’s how Noël Taillepied described the French Vexin in 1586:[6]
The Beauce has its wheat, the Parisis its plaster, Arles its muscat, Orléans its claret wine, Normandy its fruit, Picardy its forests, the Berry its sheep, Le Mans its capon, Melun its eels, Caudebec its smelt, Corbeil its peach, Cailly its watercress, Dijon its mustard, Lyon its chestnut, Limoux its combs, Toulouse its scissors, Moulins its knives, Langres its knives, and so each region has its particular commodity. But in general, the Vexin land has meat and fish, land and water, wheat and vines, wood and meadow, ponds and rivers, small mountains and gentle valleys, lime and plaster, stone and brick, cities and castles, nobility and peasants, men in great numbers, and many species of animals. In short (as I must say), there is no land in the world better suited to sustaining human life, both for the serenity of its air and the abundance of provisions when times are good. This land stretches from the small river of Valmondois in L'Isle-Adam to another small river passing through Fleury, called the Andelle, five leagues from Rouen. This land is called in Latin “Pagus Belgassinus” (as is also the land near Troyes in Champagne, called “Trecassinum”), in French, Vequecin, corrupted over time from Belgassin…
17th century and 18th century
[edit]The Vexin drew little attention during the 17th century. Life resumed its course, interrupted only by successive plague waves in 1625, 1630, 1636, and 1642, followed by the Fronde from 1648 to 1652. The 18th centurywas notably prosperous: 80% of the territory was under plow, with a three-year crop rotation alternating wheat, oats, and fallow. Wheat yields reached 15 quintals per hectare. Pasture was also significant, supporting around 30,000 sheep and 7,000 to 8,000 cows, though natural meadows covered just 4% of the area. Forests shrank to their smallest extent, occupying only 8% of the land. The region was then dominated by about 400 large farmers, to whom the clergy and nobility had delegated land, mills, and tax collection.[7]
French Revolution and the 19th century
[edit]
The French Revolution brought fewer upheavals to the Vexin than elsewhere, though the bourgeoisie grew wealthier by purchasing national property.
Potatoes began to be widely cultivated, and sugar beet production spurred the construction of sugar refineries and distilleries.
The railway arrived in the mid-19th century with the Paris-Dieppe line, followed by secondary lines like Valmondois-Marines. It enabled Vexin farmers to sell their produce more easily in Parisian markets and brought affordable goods from other regions, gradually phasing out local vineyards. Yet the 19th century largely bypassed the Vexin during the Industrial Revolution. A few factories emerged (e.g., in Bray-et-Lû), but they remained scarce, and the population stagnated. Villages ceased growing after the Revolution: the French Vexin had 29,928 inhabitants in 1790, close to its medieval figures, rising to 30,453 in 1876 and 32,195 in 1962. It has since remained a distinctly agricultural region.
Late in the century, landscape painters, followed by Impressionists, set up their easels in the Vexin countryside, especially along the Oise valley: Daubigny in Auvers-sur-Oise, then Pissarro in Pontoise and Éragny-sur-Epte, Claude Monet in Vétheuil, later joined by Cézanne and van Gogh in Auvers-sur-Oise, immortalizing the Vexin landscapes worldwide. Other post-Impressionists, like Georges William Thornley in Osny, also settled there.
20th century
[edit]During World War II, Pontoise was bombed by the Germans on 7 June and 10 June 1940, then by the Allies on 9 August and 14 August 1944.
In 1944, Rommel established his headquarters in the caves of La Roche-Guyon, and a V1 rocket assembly plant was set up in the mushroom caves of Nucourt. These villages were heavily bombed by the R.A.F., with Nucourt 95% destroyed, Moussy and Banthelu severely hit, and the La Roche-Guyon castle damaged.
On 30 August 1944, British and Canadian troops entered the Norman Vexin, advanced up the Andelle valley, and approached Gisors, previously shelled by the Allies. Reprisals were common: in Charmont, farmers working the fields were shot by Germans on 21 August 1944. Several memorials and war monuments were later erected.[8]
The Seine valley, and to a lesser extent the Oise valley, saw suburban development from the 1920s onward. Rurbanization increased populations in some villages, occasionally through subdivisions (Avernes, La Chapelle-en-Vexin) that often disregarded traditional Vexin architecture. Yet, largely isolated in the northwest quarter of Île-de-France, shielded from sprawling urbanization by the Cergy-Pontoise new town—which absorbed much of the growth—and limited transport links, the Vexin plateau escaped the Paris agglomeration’s unchecked expansion and major infrastructure projects. No highways or significant railways cross it.
The Vexin plateau was protected by its designation in 1972 and the establishment of the French Vexin Regional Natural Park in 1995.
Administrative organization
[edit]Given the less defined northern boundaries in the Oise, the French Vexin encompasses 167 communes. These span two regions and three departments: in Île-de-France, the Yvelines (31 communes) and Val-d'Oise (88 communes), and in Hauts-de-France, the Oise (47 communes).
Administratively, the territory overlaps four arrondissements: the Arrondissement of Pontoise (Val-d'Oise), the Arrondissement of Mantes-la-Jolie (Yvelines), the Arrondissement of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (Yvelines), and the Arrondissement of Beauvais (Oise).
Regarding cantons, the French Vexin includes all or parts of the following (pre-2014 boundaries):
- in Val-d’Oise: the Canton of Vigny (all 18 communes), the Canton of Magny-en-Vexin (all 26 communes), the Canton of Marines (all 19 communes), the Canton of Vallée-du-Sausseron (all 12 communes), the Canton of Hautil (5 of 6 communes, Neuville-sur-Oise being on the Oise’s left bank), the Canton of Cergy-Nord (all 4 communes), the Canton of Cergy-Sud (a fraction of Cergy, already counted, and Éragny, outside the geographic scope), the Canton of Beaumont-sur-Oise (2 communes on the Oise’s right bank, the other 6 on the left or beyond the Esches), the Canton of L’Isle-Adam (only Parmain on the Oise’s right bank), and the Canton of Pontoise (solely Pontoise);
- in Oise: the Canton of Méru (9 of 20 communes, split by the Vexin’s river boundaries), the Canton of Chaumont-en-Vexin (all 37 communes), and the Canton of Coudray-Saint-Germer (only Flavacourt of 18);
- in Yvelines: the Canton of Andrésy (all 3 communes), the Canton of Poissy-Nord (only Carrières-sous-Poissy on the Seine’s right bank), and the Canton of Triel-sur-Seine (only Triel-sur-Seine on the Seine’s right bank) in the Arrondissement of Saint-Germain-en-Laye; and the Canton of Bonnières-sur-Seine (3 communes on the Seine’s right bank), the Canton of Limay (all 17 communes), and the Canton of Meulan-en-Yvelines (7 of 9 communes) in the Arrondissement of Mantes-la-Jolie.
Intercommunal structures
[edit]Some French Vexin communes have formed agglomerations or communal associations, including all or part of the following:
- In Val-d’Oise
- the Cergy-Pontoise agglomeration community (9 of 13 communes)
- the Communauté de communes de la Vallée de l’Oise et des Trois Forêts (2 of 7 communes)
- the Communauté de communes de la Vallée de l’Oise et des impressionnistes (3 of 6 communes)
- the Communauté de communes Vexin Centre (all 34 communes)
- the Communauté de communes Sausseron Impressionnistes (all 12 communes)
- the Communauté de communes Vexin - Val de Seine (all 26 communes)
- the Communauté de communes du Haut Val-d’Oise (1 of 8 communes)
- In Yvelines
- the Communauté d’agglomération Seine et Vexin (all 17 communes)
- the Communauté d’agglomération de Mantes-en-Yvelines (8 of 35 communes)
- the Communauté d’agglomération des Deux Rives de Seine (4 of 12 communes)
- the Communauté de communes des Portes de l’Île-de-France (2 of 9 communes)
- the Communauté de communes des Coteaux du Vexin (all 3 communes)
The commune of Maurecourt belongs to the Cergy-Pontoise agglomeration community.
- In Oise
- the Communauté de communes des Sablons (9 of 25 communes[9])
- the Communauté de communes du Vexin-Thelle (37 of 42 communes)
- the Communauté de communes du Pays de Bray (only Flavacourt of 23 communes[10])
Economy and regional natural park
[edit]Most rural communes of the French Vexin united in 1995 to form the French Vexin Regional Natural Park, headquartered in Théméricourt. It includes 94 communes (77 in Val-d’Oise and 17 in Yvelines) plus six gateway towns, covering 680 square kilometres (260 sq mi) with 79,000 inhabitants.
The Picardy communes in the Oise remained outside the park, as managing a park across two regions (Île-de-France and Picardy) seemed too complex at the time (despite precedents like the Normandy-Maine Regional Natural Park, established in 1975). In Val-d’Oise, two communes (Ambleville and La Chapelle-en-Vexin) initially declined to join but did so in 2008, alongside three Yvelines communes (Évecquemont, Vaux-sur-Seine, and Juziers).[11]
In 2004, the park’s territory recorded 13,497 jobs in the private sector, including 11,056 in Val-d’Oise and 2,441 in Yvelines.[12]
The region’s workforce is primarily employed in the Cergy-Pontoise agglomeration and the Seine valley (Mantes-la-Jolie, Les Mureaux), though Marines, and especially Magny-en-Vexin, provide significant jobs and economic vitality. Workers within the French Vexin are mostly concentrated in its western part.
Heritage
[edit]Natural heritage
[edit]
The ZNIEFF zones cover 28.80% of the regional natural park’s area, divided into eight major zones, representing about one-fifth of the French Vexin.
The French Vexin includes 10,000 hectares (25,000 acres) of woodlands, mainly oaks, chestnuts, and hornbeams, such as the Bois de la Tour du Lay , Bois de Morval , and bois du Chesnay.
The French Vexin also features numerous protected wetlands.
Monumental heritage
[edit]The French Vexin’s heritage is remarkably well-preserved, having largely escaped destruction during the Revolution. Spared by the Industrial Revolution and widespread urbanization, this rich heritage—both monumental (castles, churches) and vernacular (washhouses, roadside crosses, fortified farms, dovecotes)—justified its 1972 classification as a protected site and the 1995 creation of a regional natural park by ministerial decree. The French Vexin boasts no fewer than 120 churches and 80 castles, many partially or fully listed as historic monuments.
Notable vernacular heritage includes:
- the fortified farms of Nesles-la-Vallée;
- the dovecotes of Arthies, Maudétour-en-Vexin, and Haravilliers;
- the washhouses of Amenucourt, Gargenville, Jouy-le-Moutier, and Le Perchay;
- the Aveny bridge in Montreuil-sur-Epte;
- the “boves” (prehistoric human dwellings) of Haute-Isle and La Roche-Guyon;
- the sundial on the church of Commeny.
Tourism
[edit]
Key tourist sites in the French Vexin include:
- Auvers-sur-Oise, the painters’ village where Vincent van Gogh spent his final days, offering numerous attractions:
- the Château d’Auvers , hosting the “Journey to the Time of the Impressionists” exhibit,
- the Auberge Ravoux, known as “Van Gogh’s house,”
- the Maison du Docteur Gachet ,
- the Musée Daubigny,
- the Maison-atelier de Daubigny,
- the Musée de l’Absinthe;
- Pontoise, the historic Vexin capital, with its old town, medieval underground passages open to visitors, Musée Pissarro, and Musée Tavet-Delacour ;
- the castle and village of La Roche-Guyon, plus the ridge road overlooking the Seine;
- the Domaine of Villarceaux (a 63 hectares (160 acres) park managed by the Regional Council of Île-de-France and free to visit);
- the Musée archéologique du Val-d’Oise in Guiry-en-Vexin;
- the French Vexin ecomuseum (Musée du Vexin français in Théméricourt, Musée de la moisson in Sagy, Maison du pain in Commeny, Maison de la meunerie in Valmondois, and Maison de la pomme et des fruits oubliés in Saint-Clair-sur-Epte);
- the Château d’Ambleville;
- the castle of Boury-en-Vexin;
- the prehistoric temple of Haute-Isle;
- the medieval village of Reilly;
- the Château de Jambville, owned by the Scouts et Guides de France;
- the Raymond Pillon Museum of Paleontology, Archaeology, and Local History, a Musée de France in Chaumont-en-Vexin.
See also
[edit]Related articles
[edit]External links
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Nouveau Guide du Vexin français
- ^ See the Inventory section, then select Atlas des paysages and choose Atlas des Paysages de l'Oise, particularly the sections on landscape territories, including Pays de Thelle and the Vexin plateau
- ^ Le Hallé, Guy (2015). Châteaux forts de Basse-Normandie. Vol. II. Louviers: Ysec Éditions. p. 160. ISBN 978-284673-215-4.
- ^ a b c Le Hallé 2015, p. 27.
- ^ Guide du Vexin français, éditions du Valhermeil, p. 30-33.
- ^ Noël Taillepied: Recueil des antiquitez et singularitez de la ville de Pontoise: ville ancienne du pays du Vequecin françois (pages 2 and 3)
- ^ Guide du Vexin français, éditions du Valhermeil, pages 33 to 44
- ^ Histoire du Vexin - L'époque contemporaine
- ^ The commune of Montherlant is listed as Vexin on the local tourism syndicate site, but neither the Atlas des Paysages de l’Oise nor the Nouveau Guide du Vexin français includes it as such
- ^ This commune shares more traits with the Pays de Thelle and Picard Pays de Bray than the French Vexin
- ^ Official site of the French Vexin PNR - Park communes
- ^ Source: UNEDIC
Bibliography
[edit]- Coquelle, Pierre (1903). "Les Clochers romans du Vexin français et du Pincerais" [The Romanesque Bell Towers of the French Vexin and Pincerais]. Mémoires de la Société historique et archéologique de l'arrondissement de Pontoise et du Vexin (in French). 25. Pontoise: s.n.: 47–66. ISSN 1148-8107. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
- Coquelle, Pierre (1906). "Les Portails romans du Vexin français et du Pincerais" [The Romanesque Portals of the French Vexin and Pincerais]. Mémoires de la Société historique et archéologique de l'arrondissement de Pontoise et du Vexin (in French). 27. Pontoise: s.n.: 41–60. ISSN 1148-8107. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
- Dupâquier, Jacques (1977). "Paysage et société : Le Vexin français au XVIIIe siècle" [Landscape and Society: The French Vexin in the 18th Century]. Mémoires de la Société historique et archéologique de Pontoise, du Val-d'Oise et du Vexin (in French). LXVII. Pontoise: 47–58. ISSN 1148-8107.
- Dupâquier, Jacques; Lachiver, Marcel; Meuvret, Jean (1968). Mercuriales du pays de France et du Vexin français, 1640-1792 [Mercurials of the Pays de France and French Vexin, 1640-1792]. Monnaie, prix, conjoncture (in French). École pratique des hautes études, centre de recherches historiques. p. 241.
- Lachiver, Marcel; Rivière, Paul; Vasseur, Roland (1979). Le Vexin français à travers les âges [The French Vexin Through the Ages]. Travaux et de documents pour servir à l’histoire du Mantois et du Vexin (in French). Centre d’animation pédagogique et d’audio-visuel de la région de Pontoise. p. 154.
- Mitard, P. H. (1977). "Le Vexin français à l'époque gallo-romaine" [The French Vexin in the Gallo-Roman Era]. Mémoires de la Société historique et archéologique de Pontoise, du Val-d'Oise et du Vexin (in French). LXVII. Pontoise: 9–24. ISSN 1148-8107.
- Plancouard, Léon (1897). "Proverbes & dictons du Vexin" [Proverbs & Sayings of the Vexin]. Commission des antiquités et des arts du département de Seine-et-Oise (in French). 17. Versailles: 103–118. ISSN 1146-9994. Retrieved 27 September 2013.
- Rébaudo, Daniel (1984). "Les Laboureurs du Vexin au XVIIIe siècle" [The Laborers of the Vexin in the 18th Century]. Mémoires de la Société historique et archéologique de Pontoise, du Val-d'Oise et du Vexin (in French). Pontoise: 27–36. ISSN 1148-8077.
- Sirat, Jacques (1977). "Le Vexin français à l'époque mérovingienne" [The French Vexin in the Merovingian Era]. Mémoires de la Société historique et archéologique de Pontoise, du Val-d'Oise et du Vexin (in French). LXVII. Pontoise: 25–32. ISSN 1148-8107.
- Sirat, Jacques (1996). "Le Haut Moyen Âge en Vexin français" [The Early Middle Ages in the French Vexin]. Mémoires de la Société historique et archéologique de Pontoise, du Val-d'Oise et du Vexin (in French). Pontoise: 23–30. ISSN 1148-8077.
- Collectif (1991). Guide du Vexin français [Guide to the French Vexin] (in French). éditions du Valhermeil. p. 295. ISBN 2905684275.
- Collectif (1999). Le Patrimoine des communes du Val-d'Oise [The Heritage of the Val-d’Oise Communes] (in French). Paris: éditions Flohic. p. 1054. ISBN 2-84234-056-6.
- Collectif (2002). Nouveau Guide du Vexin français [New Guide to the French Vexin] (in French). éd. du Valhermeil. p. 363. ISBN 2-913328-30-X.