Cerisy (French pronunciation: [səʁizi]; Picard: Çrisin) is a commune in the Somme department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.
Cerisy is a small village in the district known as the Santerre, to the east of Amiens and 12 km from Albert.
The commune suffers from a relative enclavement, it is connected to the other villages only by secondary roads.
It was one of the first donations made to the abbey which had installed a priory and a provost to control the exploitation of the land.
In the 15th century, Cerisy was ravaged by the Burgundians as a stone engraved in the portal of the church indicates.
At the Revolution, the priory was suppressed and from 1870-1871 the population had to undergo the requisitions of the Prussian army.
The baptismal font consists of a basin carved in a capital that rests on a short column.