Morteau

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Coordinates: 47°03′32″N 6°36′25″E / 47.05889, 6.60694

Commune of Morteau

Morteau from Mont Vouillot
Location
Image:Paris_plan_pointer_b_jms.gif
Map highlighting the commune of
Coordinates 47°03′32″N 6°36′25″E / 47.05889, 6.60694
Administration
Country France
Region Franche-Comté
Department Doubs
Arrondissement Pontarlier
Canton Morteau chief town)
Intercommunality CdC du Val de Morteau
Mayor Annie Genevard
(2001-2008)
Statistics
Elevation 750 m–1,114 m
(avg. 800 m)
Land area¹ 14.11 km²
Population²
(1999)
6,375
 - Density 451/km² (1999)
Miscellaneous
INSEE/Postal code 25411/ 25500
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
2 Population sans doubles comptes: residents of multiple communes (e.g. students and military personnel) only counted once.
France

Morteau is a French commune, situated in the département of Doubs and the Franche-Comté région.

Contents

[edit] Geography

This little city is situated in a widening of the Doubs river valley.

The proximity of Switzerland (10 km from Neuchâtel) gives jobs to transborder workers, as well as providing a clientele for the businesses of the Morteau valley.

[edit] History

The Roman expansion (200 BCE, 100 CE) began the decline of the Celts. At the Battle of Alesia, at the side of Arvernes, there were an equal number of Mandubiens, the people of Doubs. They were the best riders of Vercingetorix.

[edit] Early Middle Ages

At the end of the Roman Empire, the Alamanni invaded the region, followed by the Burgundians.

The region was influenced by the Normans, the Hungarian descendants of the Huns, the Sarrasins. These Arabs stopped by Charles Martel in 732, had followed the valley of the river Saône. Locally, their name was given to the tiny village of Sarrazins above Montlebon.

[edit] Middle Ages

In 1105 the name of Morteau appeared for the first time officially. The name of Franche-Comté, however, did not appear until 1366.

A half dozen Benedictine monks of the Cluny order arrived at this time to clear the mountains. They stayed with a resident of the Mondey area and quickly hired workers. They brought in whole families into five districts, each now cities in their own right: Morteau, Villers-le-Lac, Montlebon and Grand'Combe-Châteleu.

Morteau had a feudal castle built on the eastern side of Mondey, it overlooked the ancient celtic road which linked Besancon to Switzerland. The plague killed two thirds of the valley's inhabitants in 1349. The population was rebuilt by immigrants from the canton of Fribourg and the Aoste valley.

[edit] Fires

Over eight centuries, seventeen major fires occurred in Morteau, the worst in 1639, 1683, 1702, 1849 and 1865.

[edit] Economy

For many centuries, livestock have formed a mainstay of the economy. It is impossible to give a precise origin to the well known montbéliarde breed since all of the livestock in central Europe have similar characteristics and transborder exchanges were always common. One can see white cattle with red stops in certain provinces of the Czeche and Slovak republics similar to those from Franche-Comté. The traditional smoked sausages, Morteau Sausage for example, as well as the drinks (syrups and lemonades Rième) and candies (chocolates and caramels Klaus) have made the city renoun.

Watchmaking was for many years the principal industry of the region. In 1680, a young smith from Sagne repaired an imported English watch and decided to copy it.

[edit] Demographics

As of the census of 1999, the population was 6,375.
The estimate for 2004 was 6,339.

[edit] Areas and monuments

  • Morteau has two very nice chateaus: the Château Pertusier and the current city hall.
  • The Château Pertusier was built in 1576 by the Cuche family. During the Swedish attack in 1639, the tower at the top of the winding staircase caught fire and the western side was shot at. One can still see the bullet scars of the biscayens Swedes. The Bole family was then the owner. During the French Revolution, a lawyer from Besançon, Jean-Charles Pertusier bought the building, which had become national property, for a sum of 900 987 pounds. The house and its grounds were bought by the commune in 1935. This building is now one of the few examples of Renaissance Architecture in the Haut-Doubs.
  • The city hall was built in 1590 by the Fauche family. Occupied by the officers of Saxe-Weimar, it did not suffer during the war and passed into the hands of the Benedictines, then into those of the Roussel brothers. The commune of Morteau acquired the property in 1793. It now holds some of the municipal offices as well as the famous Black Book, kept safe in the mayor's office. In 1454, a city notary wrote in this book the records of the entire priory. It contains 54 charters from 1188 to 1514, letters of charter, sentences, arrests and conventions. Brought to Switzerland during the Swedish invasion, it was recovered intact after the war.

[edit] Notable

  • The train station in the city is the site of various scenes from the film Monsieur Batignole starring Gérard Jugnot and Damien Jouillerot (who is from the region) ;
  • It is the site of several scenes from the film L'Adversaire with Daniel Auteuil ;
  • Laurence Semonin known as " Madeleine Proust" is from Arces, a hamlet of Morteau.
  • The mathematician Jean-Claude Bouquet (1819-1885) was from Morteau.

[edit] Sister Cities

[edit] See also

[edit] Local Groups

[edit] External links

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