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Vesoul

Vesoul

FieldValue
nameVesoul
commune statusPrefecture and commune
image{{Photomontage
photo1aVieux-Vesoul.jpg
photo2aVesoul Mairie 4.jpg
photo2bVesoul Bureau d'octroi 2.JPG
photo3aVesoul Notre-Dame-de-la-Motte 2.jpg
photo3bVesoul Jardin anglais - fleurs.JPG
photo3cVesoul rue d'Alsace-Lorraine 3.jpg
photo4aVesoul Lycée des Haberges.jpg
photo4bVesoul Eglise du Sacré-Coeur 5.JPG
spacing2
border1
size300
demonymVésulien(ne)
coordinates
arrondissementVesoul
image coat of armsBlason Vesoul.svg
cantonVesoul-1 and 2
INSEE70550
postal code70000
mayorAlain Chrétien
term2020–2026
intercommunalityCA Vesoul
elevation m220
elevation min m213
elevation max m375
area km29.07
population
population date
population footnotes

|image coat of arms = Blason Vesoul.svg Vesoul ( ) is a commune in the predominantly rural Haute-Saône department, of which it is the prefecture, or capital, in the region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté in eastern France.

It is the most populous municipality of the department, with inhabitants in 2014. The same year, the Communauté d'agglomération de Vesoul, which covers 20 municipalities, together had inhabitants, while its urban area, comprising 78 municipalities, had inhabitants. Its inhabitants are known in French as Vésuliens.

Built on top of the hill of La Motte in the first millennium under the name of Castrum Vesulium, the city gradually evolved into a European commercial and economic center. At the end of the Middle Ages, the city experienced a challenging period beset with plagues, epidemics, and localized conflict.

The main urban center of the department, Vesoul is also home to a major PSA parts manufacturing plant and to the Vesoul International Film Festival of Asian Cinema. It was immortalized by Jacques Brel in his 1968 song "Vesoul".

History

Vesoul is first mentioned in a document dated 899. That document describes an elevation with a fortified watchtower and speaks of "Castrum Vesulium". Castrum is a fortification, and "Vesulium" has the syllable ves which meant hill or mountain in a language that was spoken before the Celts. Today, there is a castle that forms the centre of the city. The first houses were built inside the walls of the castle. Newcomers who found no place settled outside the city walls, on the flanks of the hill. Wine growing was popular.

The town was severely affected by the plague in 1586. It became part of France in 1678.

In 1814, after the fall of the First French Empire, a buffer state was created, with Vesoul as its capital. The principality was that of Franche-Comté, of the Vosges and of Porrentruy.

Today, one of the main factories of Stellantis, formerly an installation of PSA Peugeot Citroën, is near Vesoul.

Geography

/Map of Vesoul's urban area.

Vesoul is located in eastern France, about 100 kilometers from the German and Swiss borders and between the Jura and Vosges mountain ranges. Vesoul is also situated in the center of the Haute-Saône department, which is in the north of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté. In this region, Vesoul is included in the Pays de Vesoul et du Val de Saône, a geographic region composed the Vesoul area and the northern part of the Saône valley.

By road, Vesoul is 32 km from the towns of Luxeuil-les-Bains, 30 km from Lure and 59 km from Gray. Relative to the bigger cities in the French East region, Vesoul is located 50 km from Besançon, 64 km from Belfort, 105 km from Dijon, and 156 km from Nancy. Equidistant from Dijon and Mulhouse, Vesoul is 370 km from Paris, at the intersection of national roads N19 and N57. Vesoul station is on the SNCF Paris–Mulhouse railway line, and has connections with Paris, Belfort, Mulhouse and Chaumont.

The Vesoul area is also included in the Pôle métropolitain Centre Franche-Comté which is a government structure unifying the biggest areas of central Franche-Comté. Nine communes border the town of Vesoul.

Vesoul is crossed by four watercourses: two rivers (Durgeon and Colombine) and two streams (Vaugine and Méline). All four are tributaries and sub-tributaries of the Saône, the fourth longest river in France at 473 km, and a tributary of the Rhone, which flows at about ten kilometers to the west of Vesoul.

Governance and politics

Mayors

Main article: List of mayors of Vesoul

Twin towns

  • GER Gerlingen, Germany, since 1964

Administrative division

  • Arrondissement of Vesoul
  • Canton of Vesoul-1
  • Canton of Vesoul-2

Population and society

  • Jean-Michel Nicolier ( 1 July 1966 – 20/21 November 1991), French volunteer in the Croatian War of Independence who was killed in the Vukovar massacre
  • Sophie Bouillon (born 1984), independent journalist, winner of the 2009 Albert Londres Prize.

Demography

| graph-pos = bottom |1793|5303 |1800|5417 |1806|5708 |1821|5391 |1831|5408 |1836|5887 |1841|6788 |1846|5941 |1851|6621 |1856|7281 |1861|7579 |1866|7614 |1872|7716 |1876|9206 |1881|9553 |1886|9733 |1891|9770 |1896|10083 |1901|9704 |1906|10163 |1911|10539 |1921|10471 |1926|10859 |1931|11562 |1936|11926 |1946|11825 |1954|12038 |1962|13678 |1968|16352 |1975|18173 |1982|18412 |1990|17614 |1999|17168 |2007|16329 |2012|15637 |2017|14916

Media

Vesoul is also the name of a song by Jacques Brel from 1968, a fast-paced waltz during the recording of which Brel famously yelled "Chauffe, Marcel, chauffe!" ("heat up, Marcel, heat up!") at his accordionist, Marcel Azzola.

The town is also mentioned facetiously in the satirical rap Fous ta cagoule by Michael Youn.

Sport

  • FC Vesoul, football club
  • Stade René Hologne
  • Cercle de Judo de Vesoul, Judo club with a competitors section

Education

Vesoul has schools of higher education. The city has 1,200 students divided between an IUT, an IUFM, an Institute of Nursing Training, a School of Management and Commerce and BTS. A Council of Student Life (CVE), led by the Officer in charge of Higher Education, was established in 2011. It offers activities to stimulate student life. In all, Vesoul has 10,000 students.

** All schools and studies in Vesoul **

Culture and heritage

Monuments to the dead of the war 14-18
Hotel Baressols
The Jean-Léon Gérôme Collège
Hôpital Paul-Morel

Monuments and tourist attractions

The Durgeon
  • Vieux Vesoul (Old Vesoul) (buildings from the 15th, 16th and 18th centuries and Garret Museum)
  • Site of Vesoul's Motte
  • Site of the Sabot de Frotey
  • Lake of Vesoul - Vaivre
  • Vesoul-Vaivre Vélo-rail
  • Convent of the Ursulines (17th century)
  • St. George's Church, Vesoul
  • Gare de Vesoul
  • PSA Vesoul Plant
  • Synagogue of Vesoul
  • Musée Georges-Garret
  • Notre-Dame-de-la-Motte
  • Paul Morel Hospital
  • Lac de Vesoul - Vaivre
Lake of Vesoul

Festival

  • Vesoul International Film Festival of Asian Cinema

Library

The first public library of Vesoul opened in 1771. The abbé (abbot) Bardenet, superior of the Saint-Esprit hospital in Besançon, gave his book collection to the town. There were 1772 books. The collections became a lot larger with the Revolution. At that time, the revolutionaries (people who led the French Revolution) took the books from the monasteries of the town (capucins) and even of the region (Luxeuil and Faverney monasteries). Around 20,000 books were added to the library this way, including some 11th century manuscripts. The Mayor's office was responsible for keeping the books.

In 1981, the municipality decided to build a new building to encourage the public to read. The library was recently equipped with computers. There are around 200 manuscripts and 150 incunables.

Areas

Jean Jaurès-Petit-Banque area
Anglais Garden Park

Notable people

  • René de Boisdeffre
  • Jean-Léon Gérôme
  • Raymond Aubrac
  • Édouard Belin
  • Edwige Feuillère
  • Charles Grandmougin
  • Arthur Constantin Krebs
  • Laurent Mangel
  • Jean Pierre Marie Orchampt
  • Robert Schurrer
  • Stéphane Peterhansel
  • Albert Cartier
  • Abel Khaled
  • Jean-Baptiste Humbert
  • Alain Joyandet
  • Yves Krattinger
  • Mickaël Ravaux
  • Jean-Xavier Bureau de Pusy
  • Georges Cogniot
  • Théodule-Armand Ribot
  • Albert Mathiez
  • Jean Peyrière
  • Julien Casoli
  • Amédée Simon Dominique Thierry
  • Affo Erassa
  • Jean Compagnon
  • Cédric Si Mohamed
  • Katty Piejos
  • Vincent Luis
  • Frédéric Vichot
  • Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret
  • Jean-Michel Nicollier
  • Pape Mamadou Diouf
  • Roger Munier
  • Jean-Joseph Gaume

Awards

  • Vesoul inaugurated the first Cyber Base France in 1999
  • Voted "most athletic city of France" in 2001
  • Labeled "Child Friendly City" by UNICEF in 2006. This label was renewed in 2009.
  • Labeled "friendly and inclusive City" in 2010
  • Labeled "Cities and villages in bloom" and has 3 flowers
  • Labeled "QualiTri Collection" in 2012
  • Vesoul is the second city in France to obtain ISO 14001 certification

Climate

|Jan record high C = 18.9 |Feb record high C = 23.0 |Mar record high C = 26.5 |Apr record high C = 29.5 |May record high C = 33.5 |Jun record high C = 38.5 |Jul record high C = 40.5 |Aug record high C = 40.5 |Sep record high C = 33.8 |Oct record high C = 29.5 |Nov record high C = 24.0 |Dec record high C = 20.0 |Jan record low C = -22.2 |Feb record low C = -18.5 |Mar record low C = -15.5 |Apr record low C = -7.0 |May record low C = -2.9 |Jun record low C = 0.5 |Jul record low C = 2.8 |Aug record low C = 2.5 |Sep record low C = -1.2 |Oct record low C = -6.0 |Nov record low C = -10.5 |Dec record low C = -18.5 |access-date=21 November 2024}}}}

References

References

  1. (13 September 2022). "Répertoire national des élus: les maires". data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises.
  2. ''[[Columbia Encyclopedia]]'' 6th Edition (2000), Columbia University Press, p.2983.
  3. "Inspire toi".
  4. "Fiche de la Saône".
  5. "Vesoul - Universalis".
  6. {{Cassini-Ehess. 39644. Vesoul
  7. [https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/4515315?geo=COM-70550#ancre-POP_T1 Population en historique depuis 1968], INSEE
  8. [http://latte.blogs.com/welcome/2007/05/fous_ta_cagoule.html "Fous ta Cagoule" by Fatal Bazooka--English Translation]
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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