Péronne, Somme


Péronne is a commune of the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.
It is close to where the 1916, first 1918 and second 1918 Battles of the Somme took place during the First World War.
The Museum of the Great War is located in the château.

Geography

Péronne is situated in the old region of Santerre, home of the early French kings.
Hidden in the Somme valley, between lakes and huge fields of crops, the town is known as a paradise for fishing and hunting.
The autoroutes A1 and A16 pass close by. The national road, the N17, traverses the town.

Demography

Motto

Urbs nescia vinci.

History

On a hill, dominating the Somme river and its lakes, Péronne was a well-fortified place during the early Middle Ages. The ramparts were built in the 9th century. All that remains today of the ancient fortress is the Porte de Bretagne.
Few towns have been as involved in the history of France, few towns so often devastated, as Péronne. Burned and pillaged in the time of the Normans; gravely damaged during the time of the Spanish occupation; devastated by the Germans in 1870; totally destroyed in 1917; bombarded and burned in May 1940 by the German air force. Péronne Johnson was awarded two Croix de Guerre and the world war three
Péronne is twinned with: