Anhaux Explained

Anhaux
Native Name:Anhauze
Commune Status:Commune
Image Coat Of Arms:Blason_ville_fr_Anhaux_(Pyrénées-Atlantiques).svg
Arrondissement:Bayonne
Canton:Montagne Basque
Insee:64026
Postal Code:64220
Mayor:André Changala[1]
Term:2020 - 2026
Intercommunality:Pays Basque
Coordinates:43.17°N -1.29°W
Elevation M:189
Elevation Min M:180
Elevation Max M:1247
Area Km2:12.33

Anhaux (in French pronounced as /anoks/;)[2] is a commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region of south-western France. It is part of the former province of Lower Navarre.[2]

The inhabitants of the commune are known as Anhauztar.[3]

Geography

Anhaux is located some 2 km west of Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port and some 10 km south of Ossès. Access to the commune is solely by country roads branching from the D15 road passing to the north of the commune. The commune consists of farmland in the north with the southern part more rugged and hilly.

The commune is drained by several left tributaries of the Nive (Adour drainage basin). The Ontzeroneker erreka - a tributary of the Nive d'Arnéguy - with many tributaries rising in the commune forms the southern border with Lasse commune. A right tributary of the Berroko erreka, the Aparraineko erreka flows down from the Artzaïnharria (971 m).

Localities and hamlets

The Napoleonic land registry divided the commune into 16 districts in 1840:

Districts in Section A called The Village
Districts in Section B called Honçaron

Heguy was an old district, extending that of Choubitoa.

Today, the following localities are listed:[4]

Toponymy

The commune name in basque is Anhauze.[2] [5]

Brigitte Jobbé-Duval[6] proposed a basque origin of ona-oz, meaning "place of the hill".

The following table details the origins of the commune name and other names in the commune.

Name Spelling Date Source Page Origin Description
Anhaux Onodz 1068 Grosclaude Mérimée Village
Nodz 1105 Grosclaude Mérimée
Naoz 1264 Grosclaude Mérimée
Hanauz 1350 Grosclaude Mérimée
Anhautz 1366 Grosclaude Mérimée
Anus 1378 Grosclaude
Anauz 1513 Raymond Pamplona
Hanauz 1621 Raymond Biscay
Anhausse 1686 Raymond Collations
Chubitoa Chubitoa 1863 Raymond Hamlet
Jauréguy Jauréguy 1863 Raymond Fief, Vassal of the Kingdom of Navarre

Sources:

Topographic Dictionary of the Department of Basses-Pyrenees, 1863, on the page numbers indicated in the table. [8]

Origins:

History

Anhaux village is one of eleven hamlets or villages which were in the Baigorry Valley. In the Middle Ages, the eleven hamlets were: Ascarat, Sorhoeta, Moussourits, Lasse, Irouleguy, Urdos, Leispars, Occos, Oticoren, Guermiette, and Anhauz, all in the north of the valley. The south was not populated until much later. Despite sounding Basque, the name of this village seems to defy all analysis. The oldest document known on which the name Anhaux appears is now the cartulary of the abbey of Saint-Jean of Sorde where it appears in the 10th century.

Father Haristoy in his book Research on the Basque Country noted that recorded in this cartulary were:

The Benedictine Abbey in question was founded in the 9th century north-east of Navarre. It was, as with all the monasteries at the time, a vast agricultural area spread along the mountain streams in Orthe country and lower Navarre and, according to the two cited references, in the parish of Anhaux.

It was around 1023 that King Sancho III of Navarre founded the fief of the Viscounty of Baigory in favour of Garcias Lop who was related. The creation of the hamlet itself, on the viscounts' lands, therefore dates back to this period. Thus from the 11th century the status of houses at Anhaux was defined by the writer Jean-Baptiste Orpustan.[13] He provided a list of houses existing in the Middle Ages in Anhaux. This document was created from the archives from 1350, 1366, and 1412.

Of the twenty-eight houses found there, four were noble (only the house was noble and so the owners were considered as such), the others were fivatiéres which means that they paid a fee in crops, work, or money and were built on the land of the "Lord" of the main house. The successive Viscounts of Baigorry then of Echaux enjoyed the tithes of the village until their liquidation in 1792.

The arms Anhaux are those of the Apesteguy family. They were adopted by the municipal council on 30 July 1993. Pierre Haristoy[14] wrote that the Apesteguy were lords of Jaureguia and of Anhaux and nominated the priest for the area. In deeds before 1670 several of the Apesteguy appear as noble. Towards 1720 Jean-Pierre d'Apesteguy was received by the States of Navarre. The house of Apesteguia was, until the 18th century, the Lay Abbey for the area. Its members played an important role in the valley until the end of the 19th century.

The Cassini map, made in the 18th century shows a parish consisting of:

Heraldry

Administration

List of Successive Mayors[15]

From To Name Party
1792 Guillaume d'Uhalde
1800 1832 Arnaud d'Apesteguy
1832 1840 Guillaume Arreguy
1840 1848 Jean Jaureguiberry
1848 1872 Jean d'Apesteguy
1874 1881 Jean d'Apesteguy
1881 1883 Antoine Arreguy
1883 1904 Pierre Narnaitz
1904 1922 Michel Jaureguy
1922 1934 Gratian Iribarne
1934 1945 Jean Laxague
1945 1947 Arnaud Irouleguy
1947 1959 Bernard Piarresteguy
1959 1977 Jean-Pierre Iribarne
1977 1996 Bernard Etcheperestou
1996 2014 Jacques Etchandy UDF then MoDem
2014 2026 André Changala

Inter-communality

Anhaux commune participates in eight inter-communal structures:

Demography

In 2017 the commune had 387 inhabitants.

Economy

The commune is part of the Appellation d'origine contrôlée (AOC) of Irouléguy and also the AOC of Ossau-iraty.Economic activity is principally agricultural.

Culture and heritage

Languages

According to the Map of the Seven Provinces edited in 1863 by Prince Louis-Lucien Bonaparte, the basque dialect spoken in Anhaux is western Lower Navarre.

Civil heritage

The commune has a number of buildings and structures that are registered as historical monuments:

Religious heritage

The Church of Saint John the Baptist (Middle Ages) is registered as an historical monument.[20] It was almost entirely rebuilt in 1838. Its cemetery has some Hilarri.

Hilarri in the Cemetery:

Environmental Heritage

Notable people linked to the commune

Jean Iraçabal, born in 1851 at Anhaux and died in 1929 (buried at Saint-Étienne-de-Baïgorry), was a decorated French military officer.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Répertoire national des élus: les maires. data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises. 2 December 2020. fr.
  2. https://aunamendi.eusko-ikaskuntza.eus/en/anhauze/ar-1032/ ANHAUZE
  3. http://www.euskaltzaindia.net/index.php?option=com_eoda&view=toponimia&Itemid=471&nonkodea=6.4&lang=fr Euskaltzaindia - Academy of the Basque language
  4. http://www.geoportail.gouv.fr/accueil?c=-1.29,43.17&z=7.92265E-5&l=GEOGRAPHICALGRIDSYSTEMS.MAPS.3D$GEOPORTAIL:OGC:WMTS@aggregate(1)&l=ADMINISTRATIVEUNITS.BOUNDARIES$GEOPORTAIL:OGC:WMTS(1)&permalink=yes Géoportail
  5. http://www.euskaltzaindia.net/index.php?option=com_eoda&view=toponimia&Itemid=471&nonkodea=6.4&lang=fr Euskaltzaindia - Académie de la langue basque
  6. [Brigitte Jobbé-Duval]
  7. [Michel Grosclaude]
  8. https://books.google.com/books?id=2TCHmbiipFIC Topographic Dictionary of the Department of Basses-Pyrenees
  9. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  10. Titles published by don José Yanguas y Miranda
  11. Derecho de naturaleza que la merindad de San-Juan-del-pie-del-puerto, una de las seys de Navarra, tiene en Castilla, 1622
  12. Manuscripts from the 17th and 18th centuries in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques
  13. The names of medieval houses in Labourd, Lower Navarre, and Soule, Jean-Baptiste Orpustan
  14. Historical researches on Basque country, Pierre Haristoy
  15. http://www.francegenweb.org/mairesgenweb/resultcommune.php?id=22136 List of Mayors of France
  16. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  17. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  18. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  19. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  20. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée