Béziers

Béziers

St. Nazaire Cathedral and Pont Vieux
Béziers
Administration
Country France
Region Languedoc-Roussillon
Department Hérault
Arrondissement Béziers
Intercommunality Béziers Méditerranée
Mayor Raymond Couderc (UMP)
(2008–2014)
Statistics
Elevation 4–120 m (13–390 ft)
(avg. 17 m/56 ft)
Land area1 95.48 km2 (36.87 sq mi)
Population2 71,672  (2008)
 - Density 751 /km2 (1,950 /sq mi)
INSEE/Postal code 340032/ 34500
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
2 Population without double counting: residents of multiple communes (e.g., students and military personnel) only counted once.

Béziers (French pronunciation: [be.zje]; Occitan: Besièrs) is a town in Languedoc in southern France. It is a sub-prefecture of the Hérault department.[1] Béziers hosts the famous Feria de Béziers, centred around bullfighting, every August. A million visitors are attracted to the five-day event.[2] Béziers is a member of the Most Ancient European Towns Network.[3]

Contents

Geography

The town is located on a small bluff above the river Orb, about 10 km (6.2 mi) from the Mediterranean. At Béziers the Canal du Midi spans the river Orb as an aqueduct called the Pont-canal de l'Orb. claimed to be the first of its kind.[4]

History

The site has been occupied since Neolithic times, before the influx of Celts. Roman Betarra was on the road that linked Provence with Iberia. The Romans refounded the city as a new colonia for veterans in 36/35 BC and called it Colonia Julia Baeterrae Septimanorum. Stones from the Roman amphitheatre were used to construct the city wall during the 3rd century.

White wine was exported to Rome; two dolia discovered in an excavation near Rome are marked, one "I am a wine from Baeterrae and I am five years old", the other simply "white wine of Baeterrae". It was occupied by the Moors between 720 and 752.

From the 10th to the 12th century Béziers was the centre of a Viscountship of Béziers. The viscounts ruled most of the coastal plain around the city, including also the city of Agde. They also controlled the major east-west route through Languedoc, which roughly follows the old Roman Via Domitia, with the two key bridges over the Orb at Béziers and over the Hérault at Saint-Thibéry.

After the death of viscount William around 990, the viscounty passed to his daughter Garsendis and her husband, count Raimond-Roger of Carcassonne (d. ~1012). It was then ruled by their son Peter-Raimond (d. ~1060) and his son Roger (d. 1067), both of whom were also counts of Carcassonne.

Roger died without leaving any children and Béziers passed to his sister Ermengard and her husband Raimond-Bertrand Trencavel. The Trencavels were to rule for the next 142 years, until the Albigensian Crusade - a formal 'Crusade' (holy war) authorised by Pope Innocent III.

Massacre at Béziers

Béziers was a Languedoc stronghold of Catharism, which the Catholic Church condemned as heretical and which Catholic forces exterminated in the Albigensian Crusade.

Béziers was one of the first places to be attacked. The crusaders reached the town July 21, 1209. Béziers' Catholics were given an ultimatum to hand over the heretics or leave before the crusaders besieged the city and to "avoid sharing their fate and perishing with them."[5] However, they refused and resisted with the Cathars. The town was sacked on July 22, 1209 and in the bloody massacre, no one was spared, not even Catholic priests and those who took refuge in the churches. One of the commanders of the crusade was the Papal Legate Arnaud-Amaury (or Arnald Amalaricus, Abbot of Citeaux). When asked by a Crusader how to tell Catholics from Cathars once they had taken the city, the abbot supposedly replied, "Kill them all, God will know His own" - "Neca eos omnes. Deus suos agnoscet". (This often quoted phrase is sourced from Caesarius of Heisterbach along with a story of all the heretics who desecrated a copy of the Gospels and threw it down from the town's walls.[6]) Amalric's own version of siege, described in his letter to Pope in August 1209 (col.139), states:

While discussions were still going on with the barons about the release of those in the city who were deemed to be Catholics, the servants and other persons of low rank and unarmed attacked the city without waiting for orders from their leaders. To our amazement, crying "to arms, to arms!", within the space of two or three hours they crossed the ditches and the walls and Béziers was taken. Our men spared no one, irrespective of rank, sex or age, and put to the sword almost 20,000 people. After this great slaughter the whole city was despoiled and burnt...[7]

The invaders burned the cathedral of Saint Nazaire, which collapsed on those who had taken refuge inside. The town was pillaged and burnt. None were left alive. (A plaque opposite the cathedral records the 'Day of Butchery' perpetrated by the 'northern barons'.) A few parts of the Romanesque cathedral of St-Nazaire survived, and repairs started in 1215. The restoration, along with that of the rest of the city, continued until the 15th century.

Later history

In the repression following Louis Napoléon's coup d'état in 1851, troops fired on and killed Republican protesters in Béziers. Others were condemned to death or transported to Guiana, including a former mayor who died at sea attempting to escape from there. In the Place de la Révolution a plaque and a monument by Jean Antoine Injalbert commemorates these events. (Injalbert also designed the Fontaine du Titan in Béziers' Plâteau des Poètes park and the Molière monument in nearby Pézenas.)

Population

Historical population of Béziers
Year 1793 1800 1806 1821 1831 1836 1841 1846 1851 1856
Population 12,501 14,535 14,565 16,140 16,679 16,233 18,874 19,596 19,333 23,557
Year 1861 1866 1872 1876 1881 1886 1891 1896 1901 1906
Population 24,270 27,722 31,468 38,227 42,915 42,785 45,475 48,012 52,310 52,268
Year 1911 1921 1926 1931 1936 1946 1954 1962 1968 1975
Population 51,042 56,008 65,754 71,527 73,305 64,561 64,929 73,528 80,481 84,029
Year 1982 1990 1999 2008
Population 76,647 70,996 69,153 71,672

The inhabitants of Béziers are known as Biterrois, after Baeterrae, the Roman name for the town.

Sights

Other sites and monuments include:

Other sights in the ara include the Oppidum d'Ensérune archaeological site, and the Étang de Montady, a marsh drained in 1247, a field and irrigation system which is visible from the Oppidum d'Ensérune.

Economy

Today Béziers is a principal centre of the Languedoc viticulture and winemaking industries. Although there is still much unemployment in the city.

Transport

The A9 autoroute between Italy and Spain skirts Béziers. The final link in the A75 autoroute between Pézenas and the A9 was completed in December 2010 and provides direct links to Clermont-Ferrand and Paris.

The Gare de Béziers is a train station offering connections to Toulouse, Montpellier, Bordeaux, Marseille, Paris, Barcelona and several regional destinations.

Béziers Cap d'Agde Airport (previously Béziers-Agde-Vias Airport), owned by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry, provides connections to destinations in northern Europe. Following an extension to the runway which was completed in March 2007, Ryanair began flights to and from Bristol International Airport in March 2008, and later to London Stansted and London Luton Airport.[8] Danish airline, Cimber Air has started a summer service to Odense. A daily service to Paris Orly ceased in 2008.

Sport

Béziers fields a rugby union team (AS Béziers) with twelve championships to their credit.

Béziers also hosts Languedocian sea jousts in the summer.

Personalities

Béziers was the birthplace of:

Cultural references

International relations

Béziers is twinned with:

Other relations

See also

References

  1. ^ The Green Guide Languedoc Roussillon Tarn Gorges - Michelin Travel Publications 2007
  2. ^ Béziers Tourist Site
  3. ^ MAETN (1999 [last update]). "diktyo". classic-web.archive.org. http://classic-web.archive.org/web/20051022022345/http://www.argos.gr/diktyoe.htm. Retrieved 19 May 2011. 
  4. ^ Beyond.fr Tourist Site
  5. ^ Claude Lebédel. Understanding the tragedy of the Cathars. Editions Ouest-France, 2011. p. 59f. ISBN 978-2-7373-5267-6. 
  6. ^ "Medieval Sourcebook: Caesarius of Heisterbach: Medieval Heresies: Waldensians, Albigensians, Intellectuals". Fordham.edu. http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/caesarius-heresies.html. Retrieved 2011-09-16. 
  7. ^ Albigensian Crusade
  8. ^ Midi Libre, 24 March 2008

External links