Chaumont

The Church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste at Chaumont, Fr.

Chaumont, town, capital of Haute-Marne département, Grand Est région, eastern France, southeast of Paris. Situated on the edge of a plateau at the confluence of the Marne and the Suize rivers in the upper Marne valley, it was originally called Calvus Mons (Bald Mountain) and was built around a 10th-century castle. At first a stronghold of the counts of Bassigny, it was the residence of the counts of Champagne for a century until 1329, when it became attached to the crown. Great Britain, Austria, Russia, and Prussia concluded a treaty at Chaumont in 1814, binding themselves to prosecute the Napoleonic Wars until final victory. The church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste was built between the 13th and the 16th century. Chaumont is on the main railway from Paris to Basel (Switzerland) and adjacent to the Paris-Langres highway. The town was originally a centre of metalworking. Now its primarily light industrial base includes the manufacture of medical appliances. Pop. (1999) 25,996; (2014 est.) 22,674.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Chelsey Parrott-Sheffer.