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Le Vernet, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence

Le Vernet, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence

FieldValue
nameLe Vernet
commune statusCommune
imageLe Vernet, église Sainte-Marthe.JPG
captionThe church of Sainte-Marthe, in Le Vernet
image coat of armsBlason Le Vernet.svg
arrondissementDigne-les-Bains
cantonSeyne
INSEE04237
postal code04140
mayorFrançois Balique
term2020–2026
intercommunalityCA Provence-Alpes
coordinates
elevation m1200
elevation min m1153
elevation max m2642
area km223.05
population
population date
population footnotes

|image coat of arms = Blason Le Vernet.svg

Le Vernet (; ) is a commune in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department, and in the region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, in southeastern France.

The name of its inhabitants is Vernetois or Vernetiers.

Geography

Basic map showing the boundaries of the town, neighbouring communes, vegetation zones and roads
Le Vernet and neighbouring communes

The village of Le Vernet is located in the Valley at 1200 m altitude. Its population does not exceed 100 permanent residents, but it is often more than doubled each summer and winter, when the municipality becomes the place of departure for sightseeing excursions, particularly in the Valley, and a place of departure for the nearby ski stations (Grand-Puy, and Chabanon).

The municipality has two main villages, Haut-Vernet, perched high and Bas-Vernet below.

Geology

During the two last major glaciations, the Riss glaciation and the Würm glaciation, a glacier was present in the upper part of the Riou de la Montagne Valley. During the Riss glaciation, a of the Blanche glacier crossed the Col de Maure and reached approximately to the location of the village of the current Bas-Vernet. The diffluence was reproduced during the Würm period, but did not reach the territory of Vernet.

Relief

The Pic des Têtes, at 2642 m, is located within the territory of the commune, as well as the , in the Massif des Trois-Évêchés.

Environment

The commune comprises 689 ha of woods and forests.

Transport

The steel-decked bridge across the Bès

Natural and technological hazards

None of the 200 communes of the Department is in the zero seismic risk zone. The Canton of Seyne, to which Le Vernet belongs, is in zone 1b (low seismicity) determined by the 1991 classification, based on the historical earthquakes, and in zone 4 (medium risk) according to the probabilistic classification EC8 of 2011. The municipality of Le Vernet is also exposed to four other natural hazards:

  • Avalanche
  • Forest fire
  • Flooding
  • Ground movement

The commune of Le Vernet is more exposed to a risk of technological origin, that of transport of dangerous goods by road. The RD 900 (the former ) can be used for the road transport of dangerous goods.

A predictable natural (PPR) doesn't exist for the commune

History remembers two earthquakes to have been strongly felt in the town. They exceeded a macro-seismic intensity level V on the MSK scale (sleepers awake, falling objects). The specified intensities are those felt in the town, the intensity can be stronger at the epicentre:

  • The earthquake of 22 March 1949 had an intensity level V, and with Le Lauzet at the epicentre
  • The earthquake of 31 October 1997 had an intensity level V, and with Prads-Haute-Bléone at the epicentre

Toponymy

According to the Fénie couple, the name of Le Vernet refers to alder.

History

During antiquity, the Bodiontiques (Bodiontici) lived in the Bléone Valley, and were therefore the Gallic people who lived in the current municipality of Vernet. The Bodiontiques, who were defeated by Augustus at the same time as other peoples present on the Tropaeum Alpium (before 14 BC), are attached to the province of Alpes Maritimae at its inception.

The town appears for the first time in charters in the 11th century. The Priory of Saint-Clément was under the Abbey of Saint-Victor in Marseille, via the Priory of Chaudol (now in La Javie). The priory decided the questes and the taille, the lord decided the cavalcade and the albergue. The Comte of Provence Ramon Berenguer IV granted to the community, who reported to the Bailli of Seyne, a in the 13th century.

In the Middle Ages, the great road of Digne to Seyne passed, descending from the Col du Labouret, by Haut-Vernet, without following the Bès Valley.

In 1602, the trial exploitation of a vein of copper was cut short, the deposit actually being very poor. As early as 1604, the owners couldn't pay the workers, some were sent to Villevieille and Verdaches. These mines were given a new concession in 1614, without which their operation would never have restarted.

During the French Revolution, the town had a , created after the end of 1792.

As with many communes of the Department, Le Vernet acquired schools well before the Jules Ferry laws: In 1863, it had one each at Haut-Vernet and Bas-Vernet, which provide a primary education for boys. While the Falloux Laws of 1851 required the opening of a girls school for communes with more than 800 inhabitants, and the first of 1867 lowered the threshold to 500 inhabitants, Le Vernet nevertheless opened a school for girls, ahead of the laws. The commune took advantage of subsidies from the second Duruy Law in 1877 to build a new school at Haut-Vernet.

On 24 March 2015, Germanwings Flight 9525, an Airbus A320 flying from Barcelona to Düsseldorf, crashed in the mountains of the neighboring commune of Prads-Haute-Bléone, near to the border with Le Vernet.

Politics and administration

StartEndNamePartyOther details
May 1945Paul Mathieu
...
1977In progress (as of 21 October 2014)url=http://www.alpes-de-haute-provence.gouv.fr/Politiques-publiques/Collectivites-territoriales/Les-communes-du-departement/De-Sourribes-a-Volx-liste-8publisher=Préfecture des Alpes-de-Haute-Provencetitle=De Sourribes à Volx (liste 8)access-date=2 April 2015}}President of the Community of communes

Population and society

Demography

In 2017, Le Vernet had 123 inhabitants. From the 21st century, communes with less than 10,000 inhabitants have a census held every five years (2004, 2009 and 2014, etc. for the Vernet). Since 2004, the other figures are estimates.

|1471|18 feus |1765|293 |1793|300 |1800|310 |1806|329 |1821|336 |1831|314 |1836|328 |1841|322 |1846|327 |1851|287 |1856|276 |1861|268 |1866|271 |1872|244 |1876|249 |1881|263 |1886|265 |1891|238 |1896|243 |1901|225 |1906|226 |1911|213 |1921|154 |1926|135 |1931|138 |1936|124 |1946|130 |1954|109 |1962|85 |1968|180 |1975|140 |1982|63 |1990|110 |1999|104 |2007|129 |2012|123 |2017|129

The demographic history of Le Vernet, after the depopulation of the 14th and 15th centuries and long movement of growth until the beginning of the 19th century, is marked by a period of 'spread' where the population remains stable at a high level. This period lasts from 1806 to 1846. The then caused a rapid decline in population, most importantly a long-term movement. Between 1911 and 1921, the municipality records the loss of more than half of its population (relative to the historic maximum). The downward movement is interrupted only in the 1980s. Since then, the population has doubled.

Education

The fountain in Bas-Vernet

The town depends on the . It has a primary school, consisting of 9 students.

Religion

The Catholic parish of Le Vernet depends on the Diocese of Digne, Riez and Sisteron.

Local culture and heritage

Sites and monuments

In Bas-Vernet, the parish church of Sainte-Marthe dates from the 19th century.

At Haut-Vernet, the Saint-Martin Church is also from the 19th century.

The chapel of Saint-Pancrace, isolated above Haut-Vernet, is the old parish church. Ruined by the European wars of religion, it was rebuilt, and its roof was repaired again in the 20th century.

  • The Oratory of Saint-Roch

Notable people

  • Gaspard Laurent Bayle, physician to Napoleon
  • has a monument at the

Heraldry

Gold to a tree of vert on a terrace of the same docked two stars of gules.

Bibliography

References

References

  1. (2 December 2020). "Répertoire national des élus: les maires".
  2. "Canton de Seyne - Le Trésor des régions".
  3. de La Torre, Michel. (1989). "Alpes-de-Haute-Provence: le guide complet des 200 communes". Deslogis-Lacoste.
  4. (2008). "Les Hautes Terres de Provence : itinérances médiévales". Association Les hautes terres de Provence; Saint-Michel-l'Observatoire.
  5. (2008). "Dossier départemental sur les risques majeurs dans les Alpes-de-Haute-Provence". Préfecture des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence.
  6. "Notice communale". Ministère de l’Écologie, du développement durable, des transports et du logement.
  7. (2008). "Dossier départemental sur les risques majeurs dans les Alpes-de-Haute-Provence". Préfecture des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence.
  8. (2008). "Dossier départemental sur les risques majeurs dans les Alpes-de-Haute-Provence". Préfecture des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence.
  9. "Formulaire de recherche". DICRIM.
  10. "Épicentres de séismes lointains (supérieurs à 40 km) ressentis à Le Vernet". [[Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières.
  11. "fiche 40203". BRGM.
  12. "fiche 40092". BRGM.
  13. (2002). "Toponymie provençale". Éditions Sud-Ouest.
  14. Brigitte Beaujard, « Les cités de la Gaule méridionale du IIIe au VIIe s. », Gallia, 63, 2006, CNRS éditions, p. 22
  15. (1969). "Atlas historique. Provence, Comtat Venaissin, principauté d'Orange, comté de Nice, principauté de Monaco". [[Armand Colin.
  16. "Aux origines des églises et chapelles rurales des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence".
  17. Billioud, Joseph. (1958). "Les mines de plomb des Basses-Alpes du XVIe au XIXe siècle". Provence historique.
  18. Alphand, Patrice. (1989). ""Les Sociétés populaires" La Révolution dans les Basses-Alpes". Annales de Haute-Provence.
  19. Labadie, Jean-Christophe. (2013). "Les Maisons d'école". Archives départementales des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence.
  20. Labadie, Jean-Christophe. (2013). "Les Maisons d'école". Archives départementales des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence.
  21. Labadie, Jean-Christophe. (2013). "Les Maisons d'école". Archives départementales des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence.
  22. Labadie, Jean-Christophe. (2013). "Les Maisons d'école". Archives départementales des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence.
  23. "La Libération". Basses-Alpes 39-45.
  24. G. M., « Vers une liste citoyenne unique », La Provence, 14 February 2014, p. 11.
  25. "De Sourribes à Volx (liste 8)". Préfecture des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence.
  26. "liste des citoyens ayant présenté les candidats à l'élection du Président de la République [archive]". Conseil constitutionnel.
  27. "Liste des maires". Préfecture des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence.
  28. EHESS (1793-1999){{Cassini-Ehess. 39468. Le Vernet
  29. [https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/4515315?geo=COM-04237#ancre-POP_T1 Population en historique depuis 1968], INSEE
  30. Vidal, Christiane. (1971). "Chronologie et rythmes du dépeuplement dans le département des Alpes de Haute- Provence depuis le début du XIX' siècle". Provence historique.
  31. "ac-aix-marseille.fr".
  32. "École primaire publique". Ministère de l'Éducation nationale.
  33. "Le Vernet". catholique.fr.
  34. Louis de Bresc, Armorial des communes de Provence, 1866. Réédition : Marcel Petit CPM, Raphèle-lès-Arles, 1994
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