Bagnères-de-Bigorre explained

Bagnères-de-Bigorre
Commune Status:Subprefecture and commune
Image Coat Of Arms:Blason ville fr Bagnères-de-Bigorre (Hautes-Pyrénées).svg
Arrondissement:Bagnères-de-Bigorre
Canton:La Haute-Bigorre
Insee:65059
Postal Code:65200
Mayor:Claude Cazabat[1]
Term:2020 - 2026
Intercommunality:Haute-Bigorre
Coordinates:43.065°N 0.1506°W
Elevation M:550
Elevation Min M:440
Elevation Max M:2872
Area Km2:125.86
Population Demonym:Bagnérais(e)[2]

Bagnères-de-Bigorre (in French pronounced as /baɲɛʁ də biɡɔʁ/, literally Bagnères of Bigorre; Occitan (post 1500);: label=[[Gascon language|Gascon]]|Banhèras de Bigòrra in Occitan (post 1500); pronounced as /baˈɲɛɾɔz ðe βiˈɣɔrɔ/) is a commune and subprefecture of the Hautes-Pyrénées Department in the Occitanie region of southwestern France.

Name

The town was known in antiquity as (Latin for "watery neighborhood") and in the Middle Ages as ("Waters of the Comminges"). Its present name similarly means "Baths" (Occitan (post 1500);: Banhèras) of Bigorre, the area of southwestern France once inhabited by the Latin: Bigorri and now forming most of the department of Hautes-Pyrénées. Either Bagnères-de-Bigorre or nearby Cieutat was apparently the "Begorra" attested in AD 400, which also derived from the ancient tribe.

Geography

Location

Bagnères-de-Bigorre is located in the foothills of the Pyrenees partly in the valley of the Adour some 18km (11miles) southeast of Tarbes and 15abbr=onNaNabbr=on east of Lourdes.

Hydrography

The Adour river flows through the north-east of the commune and the town flowing towards the north to eventually flow into the Atlantic Ocean at Bayonne. Numerous streams flow through the commune including the GaiVeste which forms the northern border as it flows north-east to join the Adour, the Oussouet which forms part of the western border as it flows north, the Ardazen which forms part of the eastern border as it flows east to join the Angoue, the Quartier par d'Abay which also forms part of the eastern border as it flows north-east gathering numerous tributaries, the Lhécou flows north from Lac Bleu just south of the commune to join the Quartier par d'Abay, the Garet forms part of the south-eastern border as it flows north from several lakes in the south of the commune (Lac de Caderolles, Lac de Gréziolles), the Adour d'Arizes flows south-east, and the Adour du Tourmalet flows east then north-east through the south of the commune, the hamlet of La Mongie and the Castillon Dam, to join the Adour d'Arizes forming the Adour de Gripp.

Climate

Bagneres-de-Bigorre is relatively untouched by the west by south-west disturbances which blow out before the high border mountain range. It is however intensely exposed to north by north-west disturbances that collide with the terrain. This barrier effect is felt up to the foothills so that springs, autumns, and winters are cool and rainy while summers are often hot and particularly stormy.

History

Antiquity

Bigorre was conquered by the Roman general Julius Caesar in 56 BCE and incorporated into the province of Gallia Aquitania. Valerius Messala stamped out the last pockets of tribal resistance in 28 BC at a victory over the Campani on a hill in Pouzac. The Romans subsequently settled and greatly frequented Vicus Aquensis's natural springs. At its greatest extent, the Roman vicus covered about half as much area as the present community. In the 4th-century reforms, the area around Vicus Aquensis became Aquitania Tertia or Novempopulana. It was sacked by the Visigoths amid the Barbarian Invasions.

Middle Ages

The Visigoths in the area were displaced by the Franks following their defeat at the AD 507 Battle of Vouillé, but there are no documents or remains from the area to provide guidance on local history until 1171. Archaeologists have proposed that the city was destroyed at some point by an earthquake and abandoned following a plague outbreak in 580.

The area had recovered by 1171, when, count of Bigorre, granted "Aquae Convenarum" a liberal charter. The bill of rights and franchises lists four villages in the area protected by ramparts. By 1313, 800 "fires" (i.e., taxable homesteads) were recorded, making Bagnères as large as Tarbes, the county seat. The town was a place of manufacture and trade, with only 40% directly involved in agriculture. Mills were erected on widened canals fed by the Adour; in addition to grinding wheat, they were used to stamp cauldrons, forge scythes, and tanning hides. The Black Death reached the town in 1348. Amid the Hundred Years' War, the town fell into English possession in 1360 before suffering a second outbreak of plague the following year. Henri de Trastámara, an ally of the French king, plundered, ransomed, and razed the town in 1427. Two years later there were no more than 291 "fires" in Bagnères, although the town slowly repopulated.

Renaissance

The town became even more commercial. In 1551, King of Navarre reformed the town's government, replacing its six consuls indirectly elected by a general assembly of the locals with a larger council of 40.

The area's natural springs again rose to national prominence under Jeanne d'Albret, who became queen of Navarre and countess of Bigorre upon her father Henry's death in 1555. She frequented the baths, prompting many other prominent visitors to follow.

Already badly disposed towards Catherine de' Medici, queen regent of France, Jeanne converted to Calvinism on Christmas Day, 1560. She began attempting to impose the Reformation on her domains the following year. As the people of Bagnères remained largely Catholic, following the onset of the French Wars of Religion after the Massacre of Vassy, arrests for heresy began in 1562. While the Count of Montgomery was recovering Béarn from Catherine's allies in 1569, he went on to demand large ransoms from her other towns, including Bagnères. (It is unrecorded whether the people of Bagnères paid him, but he is recorded leaving the town unmolested and leaving for Gers.) The governor of Bagnères Antoine Beaudéan was killed by the Protestant warlord Lizier in an ambush near Pouzac in 1574. By the end of the Wars of Religion, the town was ruined. Plague also returned in 1588. The outbreak ended following a religious procession prompted by the "Lighting of the Liloye", a Marian apparition at the Chapel of Notre-Dame-de-Médous.

The ascension of Jeanne's son Henry as king of France in 1589 united his titles—including count of Bigorre—with the French monarchy.

Early Modern era

The plague struck Bagnères again in 1628, 1653, and 1654. Public health measures were taken, with most patients isolated in the Salut Valley. The disease did not reappear after December 1654.

On 21 June 1660, strong earthquakes hit the town, continuing for three weeks. Only seven people were killed, but 150 houses were damaged and the springs initially dried up. This was only temporary, however, and the water flowed again sometime later. Reconstruction was carried out with dimension stones from the Salut Quarry. This stone has the distinction of becoming like marble once polished, a feature that characterized the architecture of the town afterwards.

Hydrotherapy was gaining importance. There were 25 private businesses by 1787. In 1775, a convent building was transformed into a gambling establishment called the Vaux-Hall where there was also dining and dancing. This is the first casino in Bagnères.

French Revolution

During the French Revolution, "moderate suspects" took refuge in the city from 1789 to 1793, ready to flee to Spain if the situation worsened. The departmental authorities were wary of the Bagnèrese, to whom they ascribed little civic or revolutionary spirit. In late 1793, before the hospitals in the southwest became saturated, the wounded were evacuated to spas. At Bagnères, the Saint Barthelemy Hospice, the Uzer and Lanzac houses, and the Hospice of the Médous Capuchins were used as military hospitals.

Industrialization

In the 19th century, the hydrotherapy offered by Bagnères's spas was reckoned particularly effective for digestive complaints but the private spas were growing more decrepit. In response, the municipality organized the construction of a Grand Thermal Spa (the "Thermes"), which was completed in 1828. By the 1870s, the tourists would double the town's population of during the "season", which ran from May until about the end of October. The casino also opened its own spa, the "Néothermes".

The supply of marble became a pillar of the local economy, with the expansion of the Géruzet marble works making it one of the largest in France from 1829 to 1880. In the 1870s, the industry employed a thousand people. Slate was also quarried. Dominique Soulé expanded his business from an old mill purchased in 1862, the same year the town was connected to the Midi Railway. The town also produced woolen and worsted cloth, leather, pottery, and toys. A local specialty was barège, a light fabric of mixed silk and wool.

The demolition of the city's walls allowed the completion of ring roads around the town, and the town was the site of tribunals of first instance and of commerce.

20th century

The town's population had declined to around 7000 at the onset of the First World War, which resulted in the expansion of industry in Bagnères, particularly in the field of railway rolling stock. The marble industry collapsed but mechanical and textile industries replaced it. The share of hydrotherapy in the economy also decreased. In June 1944, during the Second World War, a punitive expedition of a company of SS murdered 32 in the town and hundreds more in the valley in retaliation against the actions of the resistance in the region.

The postwar period saw rapid urban growth, particularly in the 1960s. Rural areas of the commune disappeared. The territory was occupied by dwellings to the borders of the neighbouring communes of Gerde and Pouzac which also become urban.

At the end of the 20th century industrial activity decreased. The thermal spa guests were always present and new jobs were created by the implementation of the regional Centre for Reeducation and Rehabilitation, a large retirement home, and a nursing home.

Administration

List of Successive Mayors[3]

From To Name
1781 1784 Jean-Baptiste Nicolas Pambrun
1787 1790 Dumoret
1790 1791 Lebrun
1790 1790 de Cazebonne
1791 1792 Etienne Xavier Salaignac
1792 1794 Pierre Guchan
1794 1795 Jean-Louis Rousse
1795 1795 Bonnet
1795 1795 Dabbadie
1795 1797 Jean-Jacques Gaye
1797 1799 Dussert
1799 1799 Jean-Jacques Gaye
1799 1800 Costallat
1800 1801 Jean-Marie Sarrabeyrouse
1801 1806 Etienne Louis Salaignac
1806 1806 Piera
1806 1815 Paul Alexandre de Joulas
1815 1816 Bertrand Pinac
1816 1817 Achille d'Uzer
1817 1830 Jean Alexandre Duffourc d'Antist
1830 1831 Jean-Pierre Dumont
1831 1835 Aristide Lasserre
1835 1835 Jean-Pierre Dumont
1835 1838 Aristide Lasserre
1838 1842 Louis Dumoret
1842 1848 Jean-Baptiste Dauphole
1848 1848 François Soubies
1848 1848 Ariste Pambrun
1848 1870 Clément Cyprien d'Uzer
1870 1871 Mathieu Gaye
1871 1873 Jean-Jacques Dumoret
1873 1881 Dominique Jean-Marie Cardailhac
1884 1889 Robert de Puysegur
1889 1901 Jean-Marie Dejeanne
1901 1912 Bertrand Fortassin
1912 1914 Louis Lafforgue
1914 1915 Jean Lhez
1915 1918 Jean-Marie Cougombles
1918 1919 Jean Lhez
1919 1935 Prosper Nogues
1935 1941 Henri Suberbie
Mayors from 1941
From To Name
1941 1944 René Sühner
1944 1945 Joseph Domec
1945 1958 Joseph Meynier
1958 1965 Raymond Compagnet
1965 1977 André de Boysson
1977 1989 Eugène Toujas
1989 2013 Rolland Castells
2013 2020 Jean Bernard Sempastous
2020 2026 Claude Cazabat

Twinning

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in France. Bagnères-de-Bigorre has twinning associations with:[4]

Intercommunality

The Community of communes of Haute-Bigorre (CCHB) was created in December 1994 to support joint development projects. It has been allocated a general grant for operations by the State and large grants by the General Council, the Regional Council, the State, and by Europe.Its skills are in:

Health

Bagnères-de-Bigorre has a regional hospital which has 25 beds for medicine, 20 beds for longer stays (4 of aftercare for alcohol withdrawal), and 220 beds for rehabilitation and physical medicine (25 places for day hospitalization). On the Castelmouly site (accommodation for the dependent elderly) the capacity is 142 beds plus 2 temporary, 36 long-stay beds, and 8 day care places for people with Alzheimer's disease or related disorders. The town also has a famous thermal baths.

Education

Schools in the commune are in the school district of the Academy of Toulouse.

The commune has three kindergartens (Clair Vallon, Carnot, and Achard), and six elementary schools (Calandreta of Banhèras (Occitan School), Jules Ferry, Pic du Midi, Carnot, Lesponne, les Palomières, and Saint Vincent).

The General Council manages the Colleges of Blanche Odin (formerly city school Achard) and Saint Vincent while the region supports the Victor Duruy high school.

Economy

The economy of Bagnères-de-Bigorre is mainly in the secondary sector, at one time including railway materials, but Hydrotherapy and tourism are the main activities in the commune.

Industries

Today there are many SMEs and SMIs specializing in electrical equipment, mechanical, and aerospace industries located in the commune.

There are Four commercial zones of activity:

Hydrotherapy and tourism

The Grands Thermes de Bagnères-de-Bigorre (Grand Thermal Baths of Bagnères-de-Bigorre) are traditionally employed for treatment of rheumatism, nervous afflictions, indigestion, and other maladies. The naturally-sourced waters vary in temperature from 90to.

Like most thermal cities, Bagnères-de-Bigorre has a casino. It is in the same building with the Aquensis thermal spa. The ski resort of La Mongie is also nearby.

Thermalism and tourism gallery

Transport

Access to the commune is by the D935 roads from Tarbes which passes through the north-eastern tip of the commune and the town before continuing southeast to Beaudéan. The D938 branches off the D935 in the town and goes north to Tournay. The D29 goes from Beaudéan to the centre of the commune with no exit. The D918 from Barèges passes through the southeast of the commune through the hamlet of La Mongie and continues northeast to Sainte-Marie-de-Campan. Apart from the town area the commune is mostly mountainous with few roads.

The railway that connected Bagnères and Tarbes was closed in the late 1980s and the service is now provided by the TER bus from the old railway station which is now known as the bus station. The nearest airport is Tarbes-Lourdes-Pyrénées Airport some 30km (20miles) to the north.

Culture and heritage

Civil heritage

The commune has several buildings and structures that are registered as historical monuments:

Other sites of interest

Religious heritage

The commune has two religious buildings and structures that are registered as historical monuments:

Environmental heritage

Museums

The town has had a museum since at least the early 20th century.

The town has three museums:

Cultural facilities

The city has several cultural centers:

Many cultural events are organized:

The town has an orchestra called the Harmony Bagnéraise and a choir called La chorale des chanteurs montagnards (Chorus of Mountain Singers) which is the oldest secular choir in France and Europe [ref. required].

Sports

The Stade Bagnérais is a French rugby union club who have long played in the First Division, twice reaching the final of the Championship of France (1979 and 1981), and which plays in Fédérale 1 in the Rugby Championship in France.

The town of Bagneres has several sports associations, school structures, a leisure center, and numerous sports facilities:

In 2008 and 2013 Bagnères-de-Bigorre was a stage in the Tour de France:

stage finish, won by Vladimir Efimkin

stage finish, won by Dan Martin

Worship

The Parish of Bagneres-de-Bigorre includes 17 communes in the diocese of Tarbes and Lourdes (Haut-Adour Sector).[21]

The Petit-Rocher Carmel was founded in 1833 by Mother Marie-des-Anges. Expelled in 1901, the Carmelites returned in 1921 and a new community was formed in 2009.[22]

There is also a temple of the Reformed Church built by Emilien Frossard in 1857. It is attached to the parish of Hautes-Pyrenees with Tarbes and Cauterets.

Notable residents

English writer and comedian, purchased a house in a village near Bagnères-de-Bigorre as told in his 2006 book A Piano in the Pyrenees.

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Répertoire national des élus: les maires. data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises. 13 September 2022. fr.
  2. https://www.habitants.fr/hautes-pyrenees-65 Le nom des habitants du 65 - Hautes-Pyrénées
  3. http://www.francegenweb.org/mairesgenweb/resultcommune.php?id=2639 List of Mayors of France
  4. https://pastel.diplomatie.gouv.fr/cncdext/dyn/public/atlas/rechercheAtlasFrance.html National Commission for Decentralised cooperation
  5. http://malvernobserver.co.uk/news/malvern-officially-twinned-french-spa-town-bagneres-de-bigorre/ Malvern Observator
  6. https://www.eveningexpress.co.uk/fp/news/local/town-to-say-bonjour-to-its-new-french-twin1 North-east town to say 'bonjour' to its new French twin - Evening Express
  7. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  8. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  9. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  10. Ministry of Culture, Palissy
  11. Ministry of Culture, Palissy
  12. Ministry of Culture, Palissy
  13. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  14. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée
  15. Ministry of Culture, Palissy
  16. Ministry of Culture, Palissy
  17. Ministry of Culture, Palissy in the Saint Francis Chapel
  18. Ministry of Culture, Palissy
  19. Ministry of Culture, Palissy
  20. http://www.museesbagneres.fr/ Museums of Bagnères
  21. http://www.catholique65.fr/diocese/paroisses/bagneres-de-bigorre Bagnères-de-Bigorre
  22. Christian Family, No. 1829, 2–8 February 2013, p. 28-30