Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/communes-of-seine-maritime

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Yvetot

Yvetot

FieldValue
nameYvetot
commune statusCommune
imageManoir du Fay.jpg
captionLe Fay Manor in Yvetot
image coat of armsBlason ville fr Yvetot (Seine-Maritime).svg
arrondissementRouen
cantonYvetot
INSEE76758
postal code76190
mayorFrancis Alabert
term2022–2026
intercommunalityYvetot Normandie
coordinates
elevation m146
elevation min m83
elevation max m157
area km27.47
population
population date
population footnotes

|image coat of arms = Blason ville fr Yvetot (Seine-Maritime).svg

Yvetot () is a commune in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region in northern France. It is the capital of the Caux region.

History

The name Yvetot comes from the Germanic Yvo and the Old Norse -topt. Therefore, Yvetot means 'property of Yvo'.

The lords of Yvetot bore the title of king from the 15th until the middle of the 16th century, their petty monarchy being popularized in one of Béranger's songs. In 1592, Henry IV here defeated the troops of the Catholic League.

The town's prosperity was linked to strong commerce, developed as early as the 17th century, thanks to its fiscal statutes and to cotton spinning, which saw massive expansion after 1794. In the 19th century, the town developed fabric production. Until 1926, Yvetot had been chef-lieu of the old arrondissement of Yvetot, and a sub-prefecture. During this period of reorganisation, it lost its status of sub-prefecture. In World War II, Yvetot was practically razed in 1940 by the Germans. Later, the 75th Division of the U.S. Army, 575th Signal Co., maintained its command post in the town from December 14–20, 1944, as it counterattacked against the German army. After the war, Yvetot was rebuilt in a classical style and regained its importance in the middle of the 20th century.

Heraldry

Gules, 2 garbs (sheaves of wheat) and 2 shuttles crossed in saltire Or.

Population

|graph-pos = right |1968 |9510 |1975 |10433 |1982 |10605 |1990 |10807 |1999 |10770 |2007 |11205 |2012 |11644 |2017 |11859

The Round Church and its stained-glass window

Yvetot's modernist church with its stained glass windows

Having been destroyed during the Second World War, Yvetot's main church of Saint-Pierre was rebuilt in a modernist style by architects Pierre Chirol, Robert Flavigny and Yves Marchand with a circular plan and opened in 1956.

The stained-glass window, considered the largest in Europe with an area of 1046 m², was constructed in the 1950s by Max Ingrand. The window's main colors are in shades of crimson, gold and blue. Meticulously assembled from a thousand pieces of glass, the stained-glass window portrays saints, with a wide section consecrated to the Normans of the diocese of Rouen. Either side of Christ are St. Peter (patron saint of Yvetot for a thousand years) and the apostles, including St. Valery (apostle of Vimeu and the Pays de Caux in the Pas de Calais in the 7th century), St. Saëns (an Irish monk and founder of an abbey in the valley of the Varenne), St. Ouen (who introduced monasteries to Rouen) and St. Wandrille of Normandy. The bishops of Rouen are also depicted. Among the bishops are the 7th century Archbishop Saint-Roman (in the process of strangling the "gargoyle", or swamp-dragon, that devastated Rouen), St Rémy, and St Hugues. Others represented in the stained-glass include the Virgin Mary and Joan of Arc shining in her armour.

Notable people

  • Louis Pierre Vieillot (1748–1830), ornithologist, was born in Yvetot
  • Annie Ernaux, recipient of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature, grew up in Yvetot

Anecdotes

Yvetot's entry in the Dictionnaire des idées reçues by Gustave Flaubert, reads: "YVETOT: Voir Yvetot et mourir! ['See Yvetot and die!'] (cf. Naples and Seville)". Compare also the motto of Cassis (Bouches-du-Rhône): "Qu a vist Paris, se noun a vist Cassis, n'a rèn vist", Provençal, meaning "If you've seen Paris and not Cassis, you've not seen anything."

It is in Yvetot that novelist Guy de Maupassant received his primary education; the town itself and its surrounding area, le Pays de Caux feature extensively in his works.

Twin towns – sister cities

Yvetot is twinned with:

  • GER Hemmingen, Germany
  • CZE Kyjov, Czech Republic
  • SCO Lanark, Scotland, United Kingdom
  • POL Murowana Goślina, Poland

References

References

  1. (6 June 2023). "Répertoire national des élus: les maires". data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises.
  2. (2013). "La Normandie.". Éd. "Ouest-France.
  3. {{EB1911
  4. [https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/4515315?geo=COM-76758#ancre-POP_T1 Population en historique depuis 1968], INSEE
  5. "Découvrir Yvetot: Nos villes jumelles". Yvetot.
Info: 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.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Yvetot — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report