Recent work on the
plateau by archaeologists from Inrap and
CNRS show the presence of an almost continuous occupation since the first
Iron Age. A
Roman villa is located on the site of Moulon. In 2006, a
Gallic village was discovered on the
plateau de Moulon. It was probably composed of one hundred members:
artisans,
farmers and
ranchers. The '''ferme d'Orsigny'
(Orsigny farm) (resulting from the combination of two working farms) occupies the site of an ancient Gallo-Roman (Orsiniacum'') villa, which itself followed a
Celtic settlement. The site was reoccupied by the
Merovingians after its destruction by fire. From the eleventh to the thirteenth centuries, Orsigny was refounded by the monks of
Saint-Germain-des-Prés. It became, in the sixteenth century, a hamlet around a farm belonging to the family Mérault, which managed to establish an area of 256 hectares, divided later. In 1644, the hamlet was depopulated, an heiress of Mérault donated the domain to the
congregation of the mission of St. Vincent de Paul. It reached the area of 345 hectares in 1670. In 1789, the church property was nationalized and sold to Parisians. == See also ==