Campan Explained

Campan
Commune Status:Commune
Image Coat Of Arms:Blason ville fr Campan (65).svg
Arrondissement:Bagnères-de-Bigorre
Canton:La Haute-Bigorre
Insee:65123
Postal Code:65710
Mayor:Alexandre Pujo-Menjouet[1]
Term:2020 - 2026
Coordinates:43.0175°N 0.1783°W
Elevation M:656
Elevation Min M:629
Elevation Max M:2747
Area Km2:95.36

Campan (in French pronounced as /kɑ̃pɑ̃/; Occitan (post 1500);: Campan) is a commune in the Hautes-Pyrénées department in the Occitanie region of south-western France.[2]

Geography

Campan stands in a valley of the same name at the confluence of the rivers Adour and Adour de Payolle. It is situated on the former Route nationale 618, the Route of the Pyrenees.

Campan includes:

The ski resort of La Mongie lies in Campan.

Administration

The Mayor of Campan is Gérard Ara, whose term of office expires in 2014. Campan is unusual among French communes in having two electoral colleges for municipal elections: the township on one hand, and Sainte-Marie La Séoube on the other.

Economy

The main economic activities are forestry, green marble quarrying, farming for wool and milk, and tourism.

Places of interest

Religious heritage

The war memorial

Sculpted by the artist Edmond Chrètien of Bordeaux, and erected in 1926 at the front of the church, to the right of the south door, the monument to the dead of Campan is distinguished by its sober and touching appearance.

Unlike the heroic soldiers who decorate many of the war memorials in France, the statue that dominates this monument represents a meditating woman, her face practically invisible, who wears the traditional clothing of the people of the valley. The memorial pays homage to the dead of the wars of the twentieth century from each of the sections of the commune: Le Bourg, Sainte Marie and La Séoube.

Finally, some bas-reliefs evoke 'peace rediscovered' through representations of the three main goods of the commune: wood, butter and wool.

Les Mounaques of Campan

In the old days, when a man of the Campan valley got married in circumstances that were not normal, e.g., an old widower marrying a young girl, he was the object of a 'charivari' (i.e., pandemonium), an outbreak of very rough mockery. The couple was represented by coarse dolls, known as 'les Mounaques' (from the Occitan word 'monaca', meaning doll or puppet).

For some years, a workshop has been open in Campan manufacturing a collection of small 'mounaques'. Founded by Maryse Bouyrie and Marie-Madeleine Ortéga, initially situated at La Séoube, it has been located since 1999 at the heart of Campan, in a house provided by the municipal council, « la Clairefontaine ». In summer, displays of 'mounaques' can sometimes be seen around the town.

The Forge of Ste Marie de Campan

This is one of the high places of the Tour de France. The famous cyclist, Eugène Christophe, known as 'le Vieux Gaulois' (the Old Gaul), repaired the front forks of his bicycle there after they broke during the descent of the Tourmalet in the 1913 race. The rules of the race prevented him from obtaining assistance and he had to walk 15 km to do the repairs himself. This gave the leading pack an advance of four hours and Christophe's dreams of victory evaporated. A plaque recalls the event.

Payolle

The plateau of Payolle and its picturesque lake provide a place of recreation in both summer and winter. There one can ski, follow country paths by foot or on snowshoes, ride horses, fish and even go karting down hillsides.

The Cagots of Campan

See also: Cagot. Like many towns in the Pyrenees, Campan was home to a population of Cagots, socially ostracised craftspeople, who until the beginning of the 20th century were forced to live on the right bank of the Adour separate from Campan proper. Nowadays, the bridge that connects the two shores is called the French: Pont des Cagots or the French: Pont des charpentiers.[3] Records of the Cagots in Campan go back for more than eight centuries.[3]

Around 1580, the Cagots had built a chapel, Saint-Sébastien, at a place called French: Pré de Ferrand, near the bridge.[3] In 1597, a fire damaged the church of Campan and the Cagots rebuilt the framework. On 19 November 1694 another violent fire destroyed the church, the hall and 70 houses. The Cagots rebuilt the church and the .[3] Classified as a historical monument since 14 March 1927, the hall is the oldest in the Hautes-Pyrénées.

But the Cagots remained, like all Cagots, separated from the rest of the inhabitants: in the church of Saint-Jean-Baptiste, built by the Cagots, a chapel at the bottom of the nave was separated from the rest of the church, it corresponds to the space that was the Cagots were forced to stay in. This space contains a stoup reserved for Cagots, located on the right side of the old entrance porch, on the west side of the church opposite the round stoup intended for the non-Cagot population.[3]

See also

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. Web site: INSEE commune file . fr . INSEE.
  3. Web site: fr . Informations sur la commune de Campan . Information on the town of Campan . Passion-Bigorre . 21 December 2014.