Falvy

Falvy is a commune in the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.

Geography
Falvy is situated on the D103 road, on the banks of the river Somme, some 19 mi west of Saint-Quentin.

History
Falvy originated as a Gaulish village. Known by different names over the centuries :Fala, Falvicum in 1135, Phalevi in 1146, then Fallevy or Falevi sur Somme and finally Falvy Principle events :
 * In the 12th century, Raoul I de Nesle, seigneur of both Nesle and Falvy, gave the windmill of Falvy-sur-Somme to the church at Saint-Quentin.
 * 1629 and Louis XIII dismantles the château, a medieval fortress
 * On 22 November 1916, fighter-ace-pilot Georges Guynemer claimed his 23rd victim at Falvy.
 * On 9 August 1918, the bridge at Falvy was attacked by Lieutenant James Alfred Keating, an American volunteer in the RFC. He won the Distinguished Flying Cross.

Places of interest

 * The church of Saint Benoite has dimensions that are relative to a time when the population was larger. Its origin was as a chapel to the chateau. It was victim of revolutionary vandalism in 1792, losing much of its embellishment and harmony by such destruction.
 * The lake