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Beautiful contemporary villa near Meaux, Germigny-l’Évêque, France,77910

Between individuals Germigny-l’Évêque, France,77910
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65 km from Paris, 30 km from the airport Paris-CDG, 30 mn from the TGV station of Chessy, 45 mn from Disneylandparis, 4 km from the Sncf station of Trilport
Magnificent house of 300 m² very luminous, without any work, on wooded land of 2.700 m², without opposite, in residential sector, quiet and wooded environment, at 10 km from Meaux and 4 km from the SNCF station.
First floor: entrance, large reception room, equipped kitchen, 2 bedrooms including a master suite with balneo bathroom, many storage spaces, veranda opening onto terrace and pool.
First floor : 3 large bedrooms, one with a large terrace, office, dressing room, large mezzanine, bathroom + shower, many storage spaces.
Basement fitted out 70 m². Large garage with access from inside.
Attic. Electric shutters, reversible air conditioning, alarm, tiled and heated swimming pool facing south. Disabled access.

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The history of the communes that make up the Communauté d’Agglomération du Pays de Meaux brings them together on many points to the point of creating a community of destiny and a relatively homogeneous local identity.

Close to Meaux, the episcopal center, all these villages have lived in the shadow of the cathedral of Saint Etienne, its bishops and its cathedral chapter. Some of them, the “Daughters of the Bishopric” (Germigny-l’Evêque, Varreddes, Villenoy) or the “Daughters of the Chapter” (Barcy, Crégy, Fublaines), found themselves directly under the jurisdiction of the religious authorities. Others, like Trilbardou, depended on a direct vassal of the bishops of Meaux. Everywhere, the main Meldois monasteries (Chaage, Saint Faron, Sainte Céline) operated farms and agricultural lands.

Land of passage, the country of Meaux underwent the barbarian invasions, the Hundred Years War, the religious wars and the Napoleonic wars; each time the country recovered slowly from its wounds. In a more recent period, it was the scene of a key episode, but how bloody, of the First World War: the Battle of the Marne, which saved France from a total defeat at the cost of an immense sacrifice.

If it was “a battlefield”, the country of Meaux was and still is, to quote Christian de Bartillat, “a field of wheat”. The agricultural activity, especially the cultivation of cereals, has provided a living for successive generations of farmers since antiquity. While cereals occupied the most fertile lands, thanks to the furrows dug by the ploughs of the farmer-labourers, the hillsides saw the establishment of vineyards and the less rich lands welcomed small breeding farms at the origin of the internationally renowned cheese: Brie de Meaux.

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[/tab][/tabgroup]Phone contact +33 (0)6 03 33 87 64

More details on the Immovitrine International website

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