Rouffach | |
Commune Status: | Commune |
Image Coat Of Arms: | Blason de la ville de Rouffach (68).svg |
Arrondissement: | Thann-Guebwiller |
Canton: | Wintzenheim |
Insee: | 68287 |
Postal Code: | 68250 |
Intercommunality: | Pays de Rouffach, Vignobles et Châteaux |
Mayor: | Jean-Pierre Toucas[1] |
Term: | 2020 - 2026 |
Coordinates: | 47.9583°N 7.2983°W |
Elevation M: | 210 |
Elevation Min M: | 195 |
Elevation Max M: | 980 |
Area Km2: | 40.05 |
Rouffach (in French pronounced as /ʁufak/; German and Alsatian: Rufach) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.
Rouffach lies along the Alsatian wine route (Route des Vins d'Alsace).Its vineyards produce one of the finest Alsatian wines: the Grand Cru .
Rouffach is situated on the Lauch River, 15km (09miles) south of Colmar and 28km (17miles) north of Mulhouse, on the vineyards of the eastern foothills of the Vosges Mountains. The most important transportation routes between the towns are the N83 (Lyon–Strasbourg) and the railway line Strasbourg-Mulhouse-Basel.
Rouffach has an oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification Cfb). The average annual temperature in Rouffach is . The average annual rainfall is with May as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in July, at around, and lowest in January, at around . The highest temperature ever recorded in Rouffach was on 13 August 2003; the coldest temperature ever recorded was on 13 January 1987.
in pago qui vocatur Rubiaco (charter, 662), Rubiacum 12th century, Rufiacum 13th century. In records of the diocese of Strasbourg it is called Upper Mundat.
The name derives from the Gallo-Roman male's name Rubbius or Rubius ending with Celtic suffix -āko > -acum (cf. Welsh -og).
Similar place-names in France : Royat (Rubiacum 1147), Robiac (Robiaco 1119).
In the 5th century, the walled village (oppidum) beneath the stronghold of Isenburg was a residence of the Merovingian kings. According to pious legend[2] recorded in the chronicle of Ebersmunster, the son of King Dagobert II gave the city to Arbogast, bishop of Strasbourg, in the 7th century, after the bishop had re-awakened his son Sigebert from death in a hunting incident.[3] More certainly the fief was one of the most ancient belonging to Strasbourg.[4] It finally became the main town of an episocopal fief, which also included Eguisheim. The city quickly developed and a wall was built around it.
The golden age ended abruptly with the Thirty Years' War, when the town was devastated by the Swedes. Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria held court in the city when he was in Alsace.[5] At the end of the war, when Alsace was conquered by France, the fief was abolished. The city again achieved prosperity, chiefly due to wine growing and the production of kirsch from the cherry orchards connected with the chateau, and because it was spared during the following wars.
During the time of Nazi annexation, a Nationalpolitische Erziehungsanstalt (National Political Institute of Education, NEPA, popularly known as Napola) was housed in a former sanatorium of the city (as of October 1940).
Rouffach is a station on the Romanesque Route of Alsace (Route Romane d'Alsace).
Since 1964, Rouffach has been a partner of the German city of Bönnigheim in Baden-Württemberg.
Born in Rouffach:
Resident in Rouffach: