Vayrac Explained

Vayrac
Commune Status:Commune
Image Coat Of Arms:Blason de la ville de Vayrac (Lot).svg
Arrondissement:Gourdon
Canton:Martel
Insee:46330
Postal Code:46110
Mayor:Loïc Lavergne-Azard[1]
Term:2020 - 2026
Intercommunality:Causses et Vallée de la Dordogne
Coordinates:44.9536°N 1.705°W
Elevation M:139
Elevation Min M:110
Elevation Max M:312
Area Km2:16.33
Demonym:Vayracois, Vayracoises

Vayrac (in French pronounced as /vɛʁak/; Occitan (post 1500);: Vairac) is a commune in the Lot department in south-western France. The inhabitants of Vayrac are called the Vayracois.

Geography

Location

Vayrac is located in the Haut Quercy, in the north of the Lot, in the Valley of the Dordogne Lotoise between Martel and Bretenoux on the D803 and on the edge of the Sourdoire and Maumont rivers.

Neighbouring communes

The commune is bordering the Corrèze department.

Toponymy

The name Vayrac, of Gallo-Roman origin, is based on a surname Varius. The ending -ac is derived from the suffix Gallic -acon (itself from the common Celtic *-āko-), often Latinized in -acum in the texts. This is the domain of Varius.[2]

History

See main article: Uxellodunum. In the Vayrac commune is found the Gaulish oppidum of the Puy D'issolud (about 300 m above sea level). This site was officially recognised, in April 2001, by the French Ministry of Culture as the site of ancient Uxellodunum,[3] the location of the last battle of Julius Caesar against the rebel Gauls in 51 B.C. post the Battle of Alesia. In addition to an impressive quantity of armaments (Gaulish and Roman arrows), the famous underground galleries have been discovered, made by the sappers of Caesar in order to divert the spring feeding the only source to which the Gauls could come too, to obtain their water supply.

During the Second World War, a number of works of the Louvre Museum were hidden in a barn in Vayrac. On a particularly hot and dry summer day, a fire broke out. The farm workers abandoned their fields to come and form a water-bucket chain and saved the national treasures.[4]

Places and monuments

Notable persons

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. Book: Bazalgues, Gaston. À la découverte des noms de lieux du Quercy. Toponymie lotoise. Éditions de la Bouriane et du Quercy. 2002. 2-910540-16-2. 127. fr.
  3. Web site: UXELLODUNUM. UXELLODUNUM. fr. 2019-05-26.
  4. (épisode raconté par Frédérique Hébrard dont la mère, Lucie Mazauric, veillait sur les œuvres du Louvre - consulter Le Louvre en voyage de Lucie Mazauric)