fbpx
Wikipedia

Bayonne

Bayonne (French: [bajɔn] ; Basque: Baiona [bai.ona]; Gascon: Baiona [baˈjunɔ]; Spanish: Bayona) is a city in Southwestern France near the Spanish border. It is a commune and one of two subprefectures in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department, in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region.[3]

Bayonne
Baiona (Basque)
View of the historic centre
Location of Bayonne
Bayonne
Bayonne
Coordinates: 43°29′N 1°29′W / 43.49°N 1.48°W / 43.49; -1.48
CountryFrance
RegionNouvelle-Aquitaine
DepartmentPyrénées-Atlantiques
ArrondissementBayonne
CantonBayonne-1, 2 and 3
IntercommunalityCA Pays Basque
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2026) Jean-René Etchegaray[1] (UDI)
Area
1
21.68 km2 (8.37 sq mi)
Population
 (Jan. 2020)[2]
52,006
 • Density2,400/km2 (6,200/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
64102 /64100
Elevation0–55 m (0–180 ft)
(avg. 4 m or 13 ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Bayonne is located at the confluence of the Nive and Adour rivers in the northern part of the cultural region of the Basque Country. It is the seat of the Communauté d'agglomération du Pays Basque which roughly encompasses the western half of Pyrénées-Atlantiques, including the coastal city of Biarritz. This area also constitutes the southern part of Gascony, where the Aquitaine Basin joins the beginning of the Pre-Pyrenees.

Together with nearby Anglet, Biarritz, Saint-Jean-de-Luz, as well as several smaller communes, Bayonne forms an urban area with 273,137 inhabitants at the 2018 census; 51,411 residents lived in the commune of Bayonne proper.[4] It is also a part of Basque Eurocity Bayonne-San Sebastián.

The site on the left bank of the Nive and the Adour was probably occupied before ancient times; a fortified enclosure was attested in the 1st century at the time when the Tarbelli occupied the territory. Archaeological studies have confirmed the presence of a Roman castrum, a stronghold in Novempopulania at the end of the 4th century, before the city was populated by the Vascones.[citation needed]

In 1023, Bayonne was the capital of Labourd. In the 12th century, it extended to the confluence and beyond of the Nive River. At that time the first bridge was built over the Adour. The city came under the domination of the English in 1152 through the marriage of Eleanor of Aquitaine: it became militarily and, above all, commercially important thanks to maritime trade. In 1177, Richard the Lion Heart of England took control of it, separating it from the Viscount of Labourd.[citation needed]

In 1451, the city was taken by the Crown of France after the Hundred Years' War. The loss of trade with the English was followed by the river gradually filling with silt and becoming impassable to ships. As the city developed to the north, its position was weakened compared to earlier times. The district of Saint-Esprit developed initially from settlement by Sephardic Jewish refugees fleeing the Spanish expulsions dictated by the Alhambra Decree. This community brought skill in chocolate making, and Bayonne gained a reputation for chocolate.[citation needed]

The course of the Adour was changed in 1578 by dredging under the direction of Louis de Foix, and the river returned to its former mouth. Bayonne flourished after regaining the maritime trade that it had lost for more than a hundred years. In the 17th century the city was fortified by Vauban, whose works were followed as models of defense for 100 years.[citation needed] In 1814, Bayonne and its surroundings were the scene of fighting between the Napoleonic troops and the Spanish-Anglo-Portuguese coalition led by the Duke of Wellington. It was the last time the city was under siege.[citation needed]

In 1951, the Lacq gas field was discovered in the region; its extracted sulphur and associated oil are shipped from the port of Bayonne. During the second half of the 20th century, many housing estates were built, forming new districts on the periphery. The city developed to form a conurbation with Anglet and Biarritz: this agglomeration became the heart of a vast Basque-Landes urban area.[citation needed]

In 2014, Bayonne was a commune with more than 45,000 inhabitants, the heart of the urban area of Bayonne and of the Agglomeration Côte Basque-Adour. This includes Anglet and Biarritz. It is an important part of the Basque Bayonne-San Sebastián Eurocity and it plays the role of economic capital of the Adour basin. Modern industry—metallurgy and chemicals—have been established to take advantage of procurement opportunities and sea shipments through the harbour. Business services today represent the largest source of employment. Bayonne is also a cultural capital, a city with strong Basque and Gascon influences, and a rich historical past. Its heritage is expressed in its architecture, the diversity of collections in museums, its gastronomic specialties, and traditional events such as the noted Fêtes de Bayonne.

The inhabitants of the commune are known as Bayonnais or Bayonnaises.[5]

Toponymy Edit

Etymology Edit

While the modern Basque spelling is Baiona and the same in Gascon Occitan,[6][7] "the name Bayonne poses a number of problems both historical and linguistic which have still not been clarified".[8] There are different interpretations of its meaning.

The termination -onne in Bayonne can come from many in hydronyms -onne or toponyms derived from that. In certain cases the element -onne follows an Indo-European theme: *ud-r/n (Greek húdōr giving hydro, Gothic watt meaning "water") hence *udnā meaning "water" giving unna then onno in the glossary of Vienne.[9] Unna therefore would refer to the Adour. This toponymic type evoking a river traversing a locality is common. The appellative unna seems to be found in the name of the Garonne (Garunna 1st century; Garonna 4th century). However it is possible to see a pre-Celtic suffix -ona in the name of the Charente (Karantona in 875) or the Charentonne (Carentona in 1050).[10]

It could also be an augmentative Gascon from the original Latin radical Baia- with the suffix -ona in the sense of "vast expanse of water" or a name derived from the Basque bai meaning "river" and ona meaning "good", hence "good river".

The proposal by Eugene Goyheneche repeated by Manex Goyhenetche and supported by Jean-Baptiste Orpustan is bai una, "the place of the river" or bai ona "hill by the river"—Ibai means "river" in Basque and muinoa means "hill".

"It has perhaps been lost from sight that many urban place names in France, from north to south, came from the element Bay- or Bayon- such as: Bayons, Bayonville, Bayonvillers and pose the unusual problem of whether they are Basque or Gascon" adds Pierre Hourmat.[PiH 1] However, the most ancient form of Bayonne: Baiona, clearly indicates a feminine or a theme of -a whereas this is not the case for Béon or Bayon. In addition, the Bayon- in Bayonville or Bayonvillers in northern France is clearly the personal Germanic name Baio.[11]

Old attestations Edit

The names of the Basque province of Labourd and the locality of Bayonne have been attested from an early period with the place name Bayonne appearing in the Latin form Lapurdum after a period during which the two names could in turn designate a Viscounty or Bishopric.[12]

Labourd and Bayonne were synonymous and used interchangeably until the 12th century before being differentiated: Labord for the province and Bayonne for the city.[12] The attribution of Bayonne as Civitas Boatium, a place mentioned in the Antonine Itinerary and by Paul Raymond in his 1863 dictionary, has been abandoned. The city of the Boïates may possibly be La Teste-de-Buch but is certainly not Bayonne.[Note 1]

The following table details the origins of Labord, Bayonne, and other names in the commune.

Name Spelling Date Source Page Origin Description
Bayonne Tribunus cohortis Novempopulanoe: Lapurdo Raymond
24
Notary of Provinces City
In provincia Novempopulana tribunus cohortis Novempopulanæ in Lapurdo fifth century Goyheneche
85–92
Lapurdum sixth century Raymond
24
Gregory of Tours
Episcopatus Lasburdensis 983 Raymond
88
Chapter
Sancta Maria Lasburdensis 983 Raymond
24
Chapter
Sancta Maria Baionensis 1105 Raymond
24
Cartulary
civitas de Baiona 1140 Raymond
24
Cartulary
Baione 13th century Raymond
24
Duchesne
Bayona 1248 Raymond
24
Camara
Bayone 1253 Raymond
24
Camara
Baionne 14th century Guiart
Bayonne 1750 Cassini 1750
Bayonne 1790 Cassini 1790
Baiona 19th century Lhande
Balichon Molendinum de la Mufala, Balaisson 1198 Raymond
24
Cartulary Old mill
Balaichon 1259 Raymond
24
Cartulary
Molin de le Muhale 1259 Raymond
24
Cartulary
Molin de la Muffale 1259 Raymond
24
Cartulary
lo pont de Belaischon 1259 Raymond
24
Cartulary
Baleyson 1331 Raymond
20
Gascon roles
Baleychoun 1334 Raymond
20
Gascon roles
Bénac Bénac 1863 Raymond
27
Farm
Bouroutchourry Bouroutchourry 1863 Raymond
35
Farm
Glain Fons de Coquoanhea 1387 Raymond
72
Chapter Farm
Camps 17th century Raymond
72
Archives of Bayonne
Jean-d'Amou Jean-d'Amou 1863 Raymond
85
Hamlet
Lachepaillet Lo portau de Lachepailhet 1516 Raymond
88
Chapter District; it was once the name of one of the city gates which was previously called the Portail de Tarride.
Largenté Largenté 1863 Raymond
94
Farm
Les Lauriers Les Lauriers 1863 Raymond
97
Hamlet
Lesperon L'Esperon 1246 Raymond
100
Cartulary Farm at Saint-Esprit
Les Murailles Les Murailles 1863 Raymond
120
Farm
Panecau Port de Bertaco 13th century Raymond
131
Cartulary Bridge
Pé-de-Navarre Pé-de-Navarre 1863 Raymond
133
Farm
Château Weymann Château Weymann 1863 Raymond
175
Château

Sources:

  • Raymond: Topographic Dictionary of the Department of Basses-Pyrenees, 1863, on the page numbers indicated in the table. (in French)[13]
  • Goyheneche: according to the Notitia Dignitatum Imperii dating from 340 to 420[14]
  • Guiart: Guillaume Guiart, around 1864
  • Lhande: Basque-French Dictionary by Pierre Lhande, 1926.
  • Cassini 1750: 1750 Cassini Map[15]
  • Cassini 1790: 1790 Cassini Map[16]

Origins:

  • Chapter: Titles of the Chapter of Bayonne[17]
  • Cartulary: Cartulary of Bayonne or Livre d'Or (Book of Gold)[18]
  • Camara: Chapters of the Camara de Comptos.[19]

History Edit

Prehistory Edit

In the absence of accurate objective data there is some credence to the probable existence of a fishing village on the site in a period prior to ancient times. Numerous traces of human occupation have been found in the Bayonne region from the Middle Paleolithic especially in the discoveries at Saint-Pierre-d'Irube, a neighbouring locality.[Note 2] On the other hand, the presence of a mound about 14 metres (46 feet) high has been detected in the current Cathedral Quarter overlooking the Nive which formed a natural protection and a usable port on the left bank of the Nive. At the time the mound was surrounded north and west by the Adour swamps. At its foot lies the famous "Bayonne Sea"—the junction of the two rivers—which may have been about 1,200 metres (3,900 feet) wide between Saint-Esprit and the Grand Bayonne and totally covered the current location of Bourg-Neuf (in the district of Petit Bayonne). To the south the last bend of the Nive widens near the Saint-Léon hills.[20][21] Despite this, the narrowing of the Adour valley allows easier crossing than anywhere else along the entire length of the estuary.[22]

In conclusion, the strategic importance of this height was so obvious it must be presumed that it has always been inhabited.[21]

Ancient times Edit

 
Map of Novempopulania indicating the position of the Tarbelli territory north-west of the Pyrenees.

The oldest documented human occupation site is located on a hill overlooking the Nive and its confluence with the Adour.[PiH 1]

In the 1st century AD, during the Roman occupation, Bayonne already seems to have been of some importance since the Romans surrounded the city with a wall to keep out the Tarbelli, Aquitani, or the proto-Basque who then occupied a territory that extended south of modern-day Landes, to the modern French Basque country, the Chalosse, the valleys of the Adour, the mountain streams of Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, and to the Gave d'Oloron.[23]

The archaeological discoveries of October and November 1995 provided a shred of evidence to support this projection. In the four layers of sub-soil along the foundation of the Gothic cathedral (in the "apse of the cathedral" area) a 2-metre depth was found of old objects from the end of the 1st century—in particular sigillated Gallic ceramics from Montans imitating Italian styles, thin-walled bowls, and fragments of amphorae.[Note 3] In the "southern sector" near the cloister door there were objects from the second half of the 1st century as well as coins from the first half of the 3rd century.[24]

A very high probability of human presence, not solely military, seems to provisionally confirm the occupation of the site at least around the third century.[citation needed]

A Roman castrum dating to the end of the 4th century has been proven as a fortified place of Novempopulania. Named Lapurdum, the name became the name of the province of Labourd.[Note 4] According to Eugene Goyheneche the name Baiona designated the city, the port, and the cathedral while that of Lapurdum was only a territorial designation.[25] This Roman settlement was strategic as it allowed the monitoring of the trans-Pyrenean roads and of local people rebellious to the Roman power. The construction covered 6 to 10 hectares according to several authors.[26][Note 5][Note 6]

Middle Ages Edit

The geographical location of the locality at the crossroads of a river system oriented from east to west and the road network connecting Europe to the Iberian Peninsula from north to south predisposed the site to the double role of fortress and port.[EG 1] The city, after being Roman, alternated between the Vascones and the English for three centuries from the 12th to the 15th century.[citation needed]

The Romans left the city in the 4th century and the Basques, who had always been present, dominated the former Novempopulania province between the Garonne, the Ocean, and the Pyrénées.[citation needed] Novempopulania was renamed Vasconia and then Gascony after a Germanic deformation (resulting from the Visigoth and Frankish invasions). Basquisation of the plains region was too weak against the advance of romanization. From the mixture between the Basque and Latin language Gascon was created.[27]

Documentation on Bayonne for the period from the High Middle Ages are virtually nonexistent.[Note 7][Note 8][28] with the exception of two Norman intrusions: one questionable in 844 and a second attested in 892.[EG 2]

When Labourd was created in 1023 Bayonne was the capital and the Viscount resided there.[Note 9] The history of Bayonne proper started in 1056 when Raymond II the Younger, Bishop of Bazas, had the mission to build the Church of Bayonne[Note 10][EG 2]

The construction was under the authority of Raymond III of Martres, Bishop of Bayonne from 1122 to 1125, combined with Viscount Bertrand for the Romanesque cathedral, the rear of which can still be seen today, and the first wooden bridge across the Adour extending the Mayou bridge over the Nive, which inaugurated the heyday of Bayonne.[EG 2] From 1120 new districts were created under population pressure. The development of areas between the old Roman city of Grand Bayonne and the Nive also developed during this period, then between the Nive and the Adour at the place that became Petit Bayonne. A Jacobin Convent was located there in 1225 then that of the Cordeliers in 1247.[EG 2] Construction of and modifications to the defences of the city also developed to protect the new districts.[PiH 2]

In 1130, the King of Aragon Alfonso the Battler besieged the city without success. Bayonne came under English rule when Eleanor of Aquitaine married Henry II of England in 1152.[PiH 3] This alliance gave Bayonne many commercial privileges. The Bayonnaises became carriers of Bordeaux wines and other south-western products like resin, ham, and woad to England.[EG 3] Bayonne was then an important military base. In 1177, King Richard separated the Viscounty of Labourd whose capital then became Ustaritz. Like many cities at the time, in 1215 Bayonne obtained the award of a municipal charter and was emancipated from feudal powers.[29]

The official publication in 1273 of a Coutume unique to the city, remained in force for five centuries until the separation of Bayonne from Labourd.[EG 4][Note 11]

Bayonnaise industry at that time was dominated by shipbuilding: wood (oak, beech, chestnut from the Pyrenees, and pine from Landes) being overabundant.[EG 5] There was also maritime activity in providing crews for whaling, commercial marine or, and it was often so at a time when it was easy to turn any merchant ship into a warship, the English Royal Navy.[EG 6][Note 12]

Renaissance and modern times Edit

 
View of the ramparts overlooking the river.
 
The Bartizan on the Redoubt, restored in 2005.
 
The Ramparts of Bayonne.

Jean de Dunois – a former companion at arms of Joan of Arc—captured the city on 20 August 1451 and annexed it to the Crown "without making too many victims", but at the cost of a war indemnity of 40,000 gold Écus payable in a year,[PH 1]—thanks to the opportunism of the bishop who claimed to have seen "a large white cross surmounted by a crown which turns into a fleur-de-lis in the sky" to dissuade Bayonne from fighting against the royal troops.[Note 13][PH 2]

The city continued to be fortified by the kings of France to protect it from danger from the Spanish border. In 1454, Charles VII created a separate judicial district: the Seneschal of Lannes[30] a "single subdivision of Guyenne during the English period" which had jurisdiction over a wide area including Bayonne, Dax and Saint-Sever and which exercised civil justice, criminal jurisdiction within the competence of the district councilors. Over time, the "Seneschal of the Sword" which was at Dax lost any role other than protocol and Bayonne, along with Dax and Saint-Sever, became the de facto seat of a separate Seneschal under the authority of a "lieutenant-general of the Seneschal".[PH 3]

In May 1462 King Louis XI authorized the holding of two annual fairs[Note 14] by letters patent after signing the Treaty of Bayonne after which it was confirmed by the coutoumes of the inhabitants in July 1472 following the death of Charles de Valois, Duke de Berry, the king's brother.[PH 4]

At the time the Spanish Inquisition raged in the Iberian Peninsula Spanish and Portuguese Jews fled Spain and also later, Portugal, then settled in Southern France, including in Saint-Esprit (Pyrénées-Atlantiques), a northern district of Bayonne located along the northern bank of the Adour river. They brought with them chocolate and the recipe for its preparation.[DN 1] In 1750, the Jewish population in Saint-Esprit (Pyrénées-Atlantiques) is estimated to have reached about 3,500 people.

The golden age of the city ended in the 15th century with the loss of trade with England and the silting of the port of Bayonne created by the movement of the course of the Adour to the north.[EG 7]

At the beginning of the 16th century Labourd suffered the emergence of the plague. Its path can be tracked by reading the Registers.[31] In July 1515 the city of Bayonne was "prohibited to welcome people from plague-stricken places" and on 21 October, "we inhibit and prohibit all peasants and residents of this city [...] to go Parish Bidart [...] because of the contagion of the plague". On 11 April 1518 the plague raged in Saint-Jean-de-Luz and the city of Bayonne "inhibited and prohibited for all peasants and city inhabitants and other foreigners to maintain relationships at the location and Parish of Saint-Jean-de-Luz where people have died of the plague". On 11 November 1518 plague was present in Bayonne to the point that in 1519 the city council moved to the district of Brindos (Berindos at the time) in Anglet.[32]

In 1523, Marshal Odet of Foix, Viscount of Lautrec resisted the Spaniards under Philibert of Chalon in the service of Charles V and lifted the siege of Bayonne.[PiH 4] It was at Château-Vieux that the ransom demand for the release of Francis I, taken prisoner after his defeat at the Battle of Pavia, was gathered.[PiH 4] [Note 15]

The meeting in 1565 between Catherine de Medici and the envoy of Philip II: the Duke of Alba, is known as the Interview of Bayonne. At the time that Catholics and Protestants tore each other apart in parts of the kingdom of France, Bayonne seemed relatively untouched by these troubles.[33] An iron fist from the city leaders did not appear to be unknown. In fact they never hesitated to use violence and criminal sanctions for keeping order in the name of the "public good".[34] Two brothers, Saubat and Johannes Sorhaindo who were both lieutenants of the mayor of Bayonne in the second half of the 16th century, perfectly embody this period. They often wavered between Catholicism and Protestantism but always wanted to ensure the unity and prestige of the city.[35]

In the 16th century the king's engineers, under the direction of Louis de Foix, were dispatched to rearrange the course of the Adour by creating an estuary to maintain the river bed. The river discharged in the right place to the Ocean on 28 October 1578.[PH 5] The port of Bayonne then attained a greater level of activity. Fishing for cod and whale ensured the wealth of fishermen and shipowners.

From 1611 to 1612 the college Principal of Bayonne was a man of 26 years old with a future: Cornelius Jansen known as Jansénius, the future Bishop of Ypres. Bayonne became the birthplace of Jansenism, an austere science which strongly disrupted the monarchy of Louis XIV.[36][37]

During the sporadic conflicts that troubled the French countryside from the mid 17th century, Bayonne peasants were short of powder and projectiles. They attached the long hunting knives in the barrels of their muskets and that way they fashioned makeshift spears later called bayonets.[38] In that same century, Vauban was charged by Louis XIV to fortify the city. He added a citadel built on a hill overlooking the district of San Espirit Cap deou do Punt.[39]

 
The Redoubt, a system of fortifications destroyed at the beginning of the 20th century, seen from the Quai de l'Amiral-Lesseps.

French Revolution and Empire Edit

Activity in Bayonne peaked in the 18th century. The Chamber of Commerce was founded in 1726.[PiH 5] Trade with Spain, the Netherlands, the Antilles, the cod fishery off the shores of Newfoundland, and construction sites maintained a high level of activity in the port.[PH 6]

In 1792, the district of Saint-Esprit (that revolutionaries renamed Port-de-la-Montagne)[40] located on the right bank of the Adour, was separated from the city and renamed Jean-Jacques Rousseau.[41] It was reunited with Bayonne on 1 June 1857. For 65 years the autonomous commune was part of the department of Landes.[PiH 6]

In 1808, at the Château of Marracq the act of abdication of the Spanish king Charles IV in favour of Napoleon was signed under the "friendly pressure" of the Emperor. In the process the Bayonne Statute was initialed as the first Spanish constitution.[EG 8]

Also in 1808 the French Empire imposed on the Duchy of Warsaw the Convention of Bayonne to buy from France the debts owed to it by Prussia.[42] The debt, amounting to more than 43 million francs in gold, was bought at a discounted rate of 21 million francs.[42] However, although the duchy made its payments in installments to France over a four-year period, Prussia was unable to pay it (due to a very large indemnity it owed to France resulting from Treaties of Tilsit), causing the Polish economy to suffer heavily.

Trade was the wealth of the city in the 18th century but suffered greatly in the 19th century, severely sanctioned by conflict with Spain, its historic trading partner in the region.[PiH 7] The Siege of Bayonne marked the end of the period with the surrender of the Napoleonic troops of Marshal Jean-de-Dieu Soult who were defeated by the coalition led by Wellington on 5 May 1814.[EG 9]

19th and 20th Centuries Edit

In 1854, the railway arrived from Paris bringing many tourists eager to enjoy the beaches of Biarritz. Bayonne turned instead to the steel industry with the forges of the Adour.[Note 16] The Port took on an industrial look but its slow decline seemed inexorable in the 19th century. The discovery of the Lacq gas field restored a certain dynamism.[citation needed]

The Treaty of Bayonne was concluded on 2 December 1856. It overcame the disputes in fixing the Franco-Spanish border in the area extending from the mouth of the Bidassoa to the border between Navarre and Aragon.[citation needed]

 
Arms of Bayonne
Paul Raymond noted in 1863 that the arms of the city were blazoned:

Azure, a tower embattled and ramparted of Argent, wavy proper in base, cantoned to dexter with a letter N crowned of Or, between two pines Vert each fructed of seven Or and set with fruit pal, debruised by two lions langued confronting.[13]

The current arms are Blazoned:
[Note 17] Gules, a tower turreted of Or, masooned, windowed, and porte of Sable on a sea wavy of Azure, Or and Sable in base and surmounted by a fleur-de-lis of Or, between two oaks proper fructed seven of Or debruised by two lions langued confronting of Or; the arms stamped with a county crown.



The city built three light railway lines to connect to Biarritz at the beginning of the 20th century. The most direct line, that of the Tramway Bayonne-Lycée–Biarritz was operated from 1888 to 1948. In addition a line further north served Anglet, operated by the Chemin de fer Bayonne-Anglet-Biarritz company from 1877 to 1953. Finally a line following the Adour to its mouth and to the Atlantic Ocean by the bar in Anglet, was operated by VFDM réseau basque from 1919 to 1948.[citation needed]

 
The second Gare de Bayonne, photographed here in the 1930s.[Note 18]

On the morning of 23 December 1933, sub-prefect Anthelme received Gustave Tissier, the director of the Crédit Municipal de Bayonne. He responded well, with some astonishment, to his persistent interview. It did not surprise him to see the man unpacking what became the scam of the century.[citation needed]

"Tissier, director of the Crédit Municipal, was arrested and imprisoned under suspicion of forgery and misappropriation of public funds. He had issued thousands of false bonds in the name of Crédit Municipal [...]"[Note 19]

This was the beginning of the Stavisky Affair which, together with other scandals and political crises, led to the Paris riots of 6 February 1934.[43][44]

The World Wars Edit

The 249th Infantry Regiment, created from the 49th Infantry Regiment, was engaged in operations in the First World War, including action at Chemin des Dames, especially on the plateau of Craonne.[FL 1] 700 Bayonnaises perished in the conflict.[FL 1] [Note 20] A centre for engagement of foreign volunteers was established in August 1914 in Bayonne. Many nationalities were represented, particularly the Spanish, the Portuguese, the Czechs,[Note 21] and the Poles.[Note 22][FL 2]

During the Second World War, Bayonne was occupied by the 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf from 27 June 1940 to 23 August 1944.[PiH 8]

On 5 April 1942 the Allies made a landing attempt in Bayonne but after a barge penetrated the Adour with great difficulty, the operation was canceled.[45]

On 21 August 1944, after blowing up twenty ships in port,[46] German troops withdrew. On the 22nd a final convoy of five vehicles passed through the city. It transported Gestapo Customs agents and some elements of the Feldgendarmerie. One or more Germans opened fire with machine guns killing three people.[Note 23][47] On the 23rd there was an informal and immediate installation of a "special municipal delegation" by the young deputy prefect Guy Lamassoure representing the Provisional Government of the French Republic which had been established in Algiers since 27 June.

Policy and administration Edit

List of mayors under the Ancien Régime Edit

The Gramont family provided captains and governors in Bayonne from 1472 to 1789 as well as mayors, a post which became hereditary from 28 January 1590 by concession of Henry IV to Antoine II of Gramont. From the 15th century they resided in the Château Neuf then in the Château-Vieux from the end of the 16th century:[48][Note 24]

  • Roger de Gramont, (1444–1519), Lord of Gramont, Baron of Haux, Seneschal of Guyenne, hereditary mayor of Bayonne. He was an advisor and chamberlain of Louis XI in 1472 and then Charles VIII in 1483. He was Ambassador for Louis XII in Rome in 1502. He became governor of Bayonne and its castles on 26 February 1487. He died of the plague in 1519.[48]
  • Jean II de Gramont, Lord of Gramont, mayor and captain of Bayonne from 18 March 1523. On 15 September 1523, as a lieutenant in the company of Marshal Lautrec, he rescued Bayonne from the siege by the forces of Charles V under the command of the Prince of Orange. He died during the wars in Italy;[48]
  • Antoine I of Gramont, born in 1526, he was appointed at the age of nine years (1535) as mayor and captain of Bayonne. In 1571, he charged Louis de Foix with the changes to the mouth of the Adour along the fortifications of the city;
  • Antoine II de Gramont (1572–1644), Count of Gramont, Guiche and Toulonjon, Viscount then Count of Louvigny, ruler of Bidache, Viscount of Aster, lord then baron of Lescun. He was a Duke de Brevet in 1643, but unverified by Parliament. On 28 January 1590 Henry IV granted him and his descendants the perpetual office of Mayor of Bayonne. He then became the Viceroy of Navarre. In 1595, Antoine II de Gramont charged Jean Errard (1599) then Louis de Millet (1612) to strengthen the defenses of the city;
  • Antoine III of Gramont-Touloujon (1604–1678), Count and then, in 1648, Duke of Gramont, Prince of Bidache, Count of Guiche, Toulonjon, and Louvigny, Viscount of Astern, Baron of Andouins and Hagetmau, and lord of Lesparre, peer of France in 1648, Marshal of France in 1641. As Ambassador of Louis XIV, in 1660 he sought the hand of the Infanta Maria Theresa. The king gave him power of attorney to represent him in the marriage which was celebrated in Madrid. It was he who welcomed Louis XIV, Anne of Austria, Mazarin, and the rest of the Court to Bayonne. He died on 12 July 1678 at the Château-Vieux;[48]
  • Antoine Charles IV of Gramont (1641–1720), Duke of Gramont, Prince of Bidache, Count of Guiche and Louvigny, Viscount of Aster, Baron of Andouins and Hagetmau, Lord of Lesparre, peer of France, Viceroy of Navarre. In 1689, he continued the fortification works undertaken by Vauban in Bayonne, where he remained from 1706 to 1712. He supported Philip V during the War of the Spanish Succession, using Bayonne to supply his troops, weapons, reinforcements and subsidies. In retaliation, the opponents of Philip V organized two attacks in 1707: one at Château-Vieux leaving Antoine IV unharmed.[48]

Modern times Edit

List of Successive Mayors[49]

Mayors from 1725 to 1941
From To Name
1725 Matthieu de Bruix
1726 Jean de Moracin
1728 François de Poheyt
1730 Léon Dubrocq
1732 Pierre Commarieu
1736 Jean Desbiey
1738 Jean-Louis Rol Montpellier
1740 Joseph Dulivier
1745 Léon Brethous
1749 Joseph Dantes
1750 Dominique Behic
1752 François Casaubon Maisonneuve
1754 Jean Baptiste Picot
1756 Martin Bretous
1758 Jean Desbiey
1760 Jean François Dubrocq
1762 Jean Rol de Montpellier
1764 Martin Antoine Bretous
1766 Jacques Pastoureau
1768 Joseph de Sorhainde
1770 Martin Castera
1772 Pierre Larue
1774 Dominique Duhagon
1775 Jean-Pierre de Nogué
1776 Lasserre
1778 Pierre Anselme Monho
1780 Joachim Dubrocq
1782 Etienne Lalanne
1785 Joseph Verdier
1788 Jacques Poydenot
1790 Dominique Dubrocq
1791 Charles Lasserre
1791 Paul Faurie
1792 Jean-Pierre Joseph de Basterrèche
1793 Leclerc
1794 Johaneau
1795 Dufourcq
1798 Barthélémy Poydenot
1798 Sauvine
1800 Paum Lacroix Ravignan
1803 1806 Joseph Laborde Noguez
1806 Chrysostome Dechegaray
1815 Martin Charles Chégaray
1816 Arnaud Fourcade
1818 Alexandre Betbeder
1824 Antoine Robert d'Hirairt
1829 Joachim Alexandre Dubrocq
1830 1832 Bernard Lanne
1832 1833 Joseph Arnaud Eugène de Basterreche
1833 1848 François Balasque
1848 1849 Eugène Boutouey
1849 1850 Joachim Alexandre Dubrocq
1852 1869 Jules Labat
1871 1876 Jules Séraphin Chateauneuf
1876 1881 Jacques Théodore Plantié
1881 1884 Edouard Séraphin Haulon
1884 1885 Jacques Léon Portes
1885 1888 Joseph Edouard Viard
1888 1908 Gabriel Léo Pouzac
1908 1919 Joseph Garat
1919 1925 Jules Prosper Castagnet
1925 1934 Joseph Garat
1934 1935 Jules Lafourcade
1935 1941 Pierre Simonet
Mayors from 1941
From To Name Party Position
1941 1944 Marcel Ribeton
1944 1945 Jean Labourdique
1945 1947 Jean Pierre Brana
1947 1958 Maurice Delay Surgeon
1958 1959 Georges Forsans
1959 1995 Henri Grenet UDF Surgeon
1995 2014 Jean Grenet UDI MP, Chairman of the Adour-Basque Coast agglomeration 2008–2014
2014 2026 Jean René Etchegaray UDI President of the Adour-Basque Coast agglomeration

Cantons of Bayonne Edit

As per the Decree of 22 December 1789 Bayonne was part of two cantons: Bayonne-North-east, which includes part of Bayonne commune plus Boucau, Saint-Pierre-d'Irube, Lahonce, Mouguerre, and Urcuit; and Bayonne Northwest which consisted of the rest of Bayonne commune plus Anglet, Arcangues, and Bassussarry.

In a first revision of cantons in 1973 three cantons were created from the same total; geographic area: Bayonne North, Bayonne East, and Bayonne West. A further reconfiguration in 1982 focused primarily on Bayonne and, apart from Bayonne North Canton, which also includes Boucau, the cantons of Bayonne East and Bayonne West did not change.

Starting from the 2015 French departmental elections which took place on 22 and 29 March, a new division took effect following the decree of 25 February 2014[50] Once again three cantons centred on Bayonne are defined: Bayonne-1—with part of Anglet; Bayonne-2—which includes Boucau; and Bayonne-3 now define the cantonal territorial division of the area.

Judicial and administrative proceedings Edit

Bayonne is the seat of many courts for the region. It falls under the jurisdiction of the Tribunal d'instance (District court) of Bayonne, the Tribunal de grande instance (High Court) of Bayonne, the Cour d'appel (Court of Appeal) of Pau, the Tribunal pour enfants (Juvenile court) of Bayonne, the Conseil de prud'hommes (Labour Court) of Bayonne, the Tribunal de commerce (Commercial Court) of Bayonne, the Tribunal administratif (Administrative tribunal) of Pau, and the Cour administrative d'appel (Administrative Court of Appeal) of Bordeaux.[51]

The commune has a police station, a Departmental Gendarmerie, an Autonomous Territorial Brigade of the district gendarmerie, squadron 24/2 of Mobile Gendarmerie and a Tax collection office.

Intercommunality Edit

The commune is part of twelve inter-communal structures of which eleven are based in the commune:[52]

  • the Communauté d'agglomération du Pays Basque;
  • the transport association of Côte basque-Adour Agglomeration (STACBA);
  • the intercommunal association for the management of the Txakurrak centre;
  • the intercommunal association for the support of Basque culture;
  • the Bil Ta Garbi joint association;
  • the joint association for maritime Nive;
  • the joint association for the Basque Museum and the History of Bayonne;
  • the joint association for the development and monitoring of SCOT in the agglomeration of Bayonne and south Landes;
  • the Kosta Garbia joint association;
  • the joint association for the development of the European freight centre of Bayonne-Mouguerre-Lahonce;
  • the joint association for operating the regional Maurice Ravel Conservatory.
  • the Energy association of Pyrénées-Atlantiques;

The city of Bayonne is part of the Communauté d'agglomération du Pays Basque which also includes Anglet, Biarritz, Bidart, Boucau, Hendaye and Saint-Jean-de-Luz. The statutory powers of the structure extend to economic development—including higher education and research—housing and urban planning, public transport—through Transdev—alternative and the collection and recovery waste collection and management of rain and coastal waters, the sustainable development, interregional cooperation and finally 106.

In addition Bayonne is part of the Basque Bayonne-San Sebastián Eurocity which is a European economic interest grouping (EEIG) established in 1993 based in San Sebastián.[53][54]

Twin towns – Sister cities Edit

Bayonne has twinning associations with:[55]

Geography Edit

Bayonne is located in the south-west of France on the western border between Basque Country and Gascony. It developed at the confluence of the Adour and tributary on the left bank, the Nive, 6 km from the Atlantic coast. The commune was part of the Basque province of Labourd.

Geology and relief Edit

Bayonne occupies a territory characterized by a flat relief to the west and to the north towards the Landes forest, tending to slightly raise towards the south and east. The city has developed at the confluence of the Adour and Nive 6 kilometres (3.7 miles) from the ocean. The meeting point of the two rivers coincides with a narrowing of the Adour valley. Above this the alluvial plain extends for nearly thirty kilometres (19 miles) towards both Tercis-les-Bains and Peyrehorade, and is characterized by swampy meadows called barthes. These were are influenced by floods and high tides.[Note 25] Downstream from this point, the river has shaped a large, wide bed in the sand dunes, creating a significant bottleneck at the confluence.

The occupation of the hill that dominates this narrowing of the valley developed through a gradual spread across the lowlands. Occupants built embankments and the aggradation from flood soil.[PH 7]

The Nive has played a leading role in the development of the Bayonne river system in recent geological time by the formation of alluvial terraces; these form the sub-soil of Bayonne beneath the surface accumulations of silt and aeolian sands.[PH 8] The drainage network of the western Pre-Pyrenees evolved mostly from the Quaternary, from south-east to northwest, oriented east–west. The Adour was captured by the gaves and this system, together with the Nive, led to the emergence of a new alignment of the lower Adour and the Adour-Nive confluence. This capture has been dated to the early Quaternary (80,000 years ago).[PH 8]

Before this capture, the Nive had deposited pebbles from the Mindel glaciation of medium to large sizes; this slowed erosion of the hills causing the bottleneck at Bayonne. After the deposit of the lowest alluvial terrace (10 to 15 metres (33–49 feet) high at Grand Bayonne), the course of the Adour became fixed in its lower reaches.[PH 8]

Subsequent to these deposits, there was a rise in sea level in the Holocene period (from 15,000 to 5000 years ago). This explains the invasion of the lower valleys with fine sand, peat, and mud with a thickness of more than 40 metres (130 feet) below the current bed of the Adour and the Nive in Bayonne. These same deposits are spread across the barthes.[PH 7]

In the late Quaternary, the current topographic physiognomy was formed—i.e. a set of hills overlooking a swampy lowland. The promontory of Bassussarry–Marracq ultimately extended to the Labourdin foothills. The Grand Bayonne hill is an example. Similarly, on the right bank of the Nive, the heights of Château-Neuf (Mocoron Hill) met the latest advance of the plateau of Saint-Pierre-d'Irube (height 30 to 35 metres (98–115 feet)).[PH 7] On the right bank of the Adour, the heights of Castelnau (today the citadel), with an altitude of 35 to 40 metres (115–131 feet), and Fort (today Saint-Esprit), with an altitude of 20 to 25 metres (66–82 feet), rise above the Barthes of the Adour, the Nive, Bourgneuf, Saint-Frédéric, Sainte-Croix, Aritxague, and Pontots.[PH 7]

The area of the commune is 2,168 hectares (5,360 acres) and its altitude varies between 0 to 55 metres (0–180 feet).[57]

Hydrography Edit

 
The confluence of the Adour and the Nive from the right bank of the Adour.
 
Confluence of the Nive in Bayonne in 1843, by Eugène de Malbos

The city developed along the river Adour.[58] The river is part of the Natura 2000 network from its source at Bagnères-de-Bigorre to its exit to the Atlantic Ocean after Bayonne, between Tarnos (Landes) for the right bank and Anglet (Pyrénées-Atlantiques) for the left bank.[59][60]

Apart from the Nive, which joins the left bank of the Adour after 79.3 kilometres (49.3 miles) of a sometimes tumultuous course, two tributaries join the Adour in Bayonne commune: the Ruisseau de Portou and the Ruisseau du Moulin Esbouc. Tributaries of the Nive are the Ruisseau de Hillans and the Ruisseau d'Urdaintz which both rise in the commune.[61]

Climate Edit

The nearest weather station is that of Biarritz-Anglet.

The climate of Bayonne is relatively similar to that of its neighbour Biarritz, described below, with fairly heavy rainfall; the oceanic climate is due to the proximity of the Atlantic Ocean. The average winter temperature is around 8 °C and is around 20 °C in summer. The lowest temperature recorded was −12.7 °C on 16 January 1985 and the highest 40.6 °C on 4 August 2003 in the 2003 European heat wave.[citation needed] Rains on the Basque coast are rarely persistent except during winter storms. They often take the form of intense thunderstorms of short duration.

Town Sunshine
 
(hours/yr)
Rain
 
(mm/yr)
Snow
 
(days/yr)
Storm
 
(days/yr)
Fog
 
(days/yr)
National average 1,973 770 14 22 40
Bayonne[63] 1920 1450 2.2 35.5 28.5
Paris 1,661 637 12 18 10
Nice 2,724 767 1 29 1
Strasbourg 1,693 665 29 29 56
Brest 1,605 1,211 7 12 75
Climate data for Biarritz-Anglet (altitude 69 metres (226 feet), 1981–2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 23.4
(74.1)
28.9
(84.0)
29.7
(85.5)
32.1
(89.8)
34.8
(94.6)
39.2
(102.6)
39.8
(103.6)
40.6
(105.1)
37.0
(98.6)
32.2
(90.0)
27.8
(82.0)
25.1
(77.2)
40.6
(105.1)
Average high °C (°F) 12.0
(53.6)
12.8
(55.0)
15.0
(59.0)
16.2
(61.2)
19.6
(67.3)
22.1
(71.8)
24.1
(75.4)
24.7
(76.5)
23.2
(73.8)
20.0
(68.0)
15.1
(59.2)
12.5
(54.5)
18.1
(64.6)
Daily mean °C (°F) 8.4
(47.1)
8.9
(48.0)
11.0
(51.8)
12.4
(54.3)
15.6
(60.1)
18.3
(64.9)
20.4
(68.7)
20.8
(69.4)
18.8
(65.8)
16.0
(60.8)
11.4
(52.5)
9.0
(48.2)
14.3
(57.7)
Average low °C (°F) 4.8
(40.6)
5.0
(41.0)
7.0
(44.6)
8.5
(47.3)
11.6
(52.9)
14.6
(58.3)
16.7
(62.1)
17.0
(62.6)
14.5
(58.1)
11.9
(53.4)
7.7
(45.9)
5.5
(41.9)
10.4
(50.7)
Record low °C (°F) −12.7
(9.1)
−11.5
(11.3)
−7.2
(19.0)
−1.3
(29.7)
3.3
(37.9)
5.3
(41.5)
9.2
(48.6)
8.6
(47.5)
5.3
(41.5)
−0.6
(30.9)
−5.7
(21.7)
−8.9
(16.0)
−12.7
(9.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 128.8
(5.07)
111.5
(4.39)
103.5
(4.07)
129.7
(5.11)
113.9
(4.48)
87.8
(3.46)
69.3
(2.73)
98.4
(3.87)
119.6
(4.71)
152.1
(5.99)
185.9
(7.32)
150.4
(5.92)
1,450.9
(57.12)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1 mm) 13.4 12.0 11.9 13.6 12.9 10.4 8.8 9.6 9.7 12.5 13.0 12.6 140.5
Average snowy days 0.8 1.0 0.3 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.5 3.0
Average relative humidity (%) 77 75 73 77 78 81 80 81 80 78 79 78 78.1
Mean monthly sunshine hours 100.2 114.1 164.4 169.4 193.7 203.3 209.0 206.8 192.8 141.7 103.8 88.3 1,887.3
Source 1: Météo France[64][65][66]
Source 2: Infoclimat.fr (humidity and snowy days, 1961–1990)[67]

Transport Edit

 
Public transport around Bayonne: railway lines are black, the intercity bus lines Pyrénées-Atlantiques are green and those of Landes purple. The PTU (perimeter of urban transport, which operates the Chronoplus network is uncharted here) is bounded by a red line.
 
Means of transport (water, roads, bridges, and railways).

Road Edit

Bayonne is located at the intersection of the A63 autoroute (Bordeaux-Spain) and the D1 extension of the A64 autoroute (towards Toulouse). The city is served by three interchanges—two of them on the A63: exit   6  (Bayonne Nord) serves the northern districts of Bayonne but also allows quick access to the centre while exit   5  (Bayonne Sud) provides access to the south and also serves Anglet. The third exit is the D1 / A64 via the Mousserolles interchange (exit   1  Bayonne Mousserolles) which links the district of the same name and also serves the neighbouring communes of Mouguerre and Saint-Pierre-d'Irube.

Bayonne was traversed by Route nationale 10 connecting Paris to Hendaye but this is now downgraded to a departmental road D810. Route nationale 117, linking Bayonne to Toulouse has been downgraded to departmental road D817.

Bridges Edit

 
The Saint-Esprit bridge over the Adour.

There are several bridges over both the Nive and the Adour linking the various districts.

Coming from upstream on the Adour there is the A63 bridge, then the Saint-Frédéric bridge which carries the D 810, then the railway bridge that replaced the old Eiffel iron bridge, the Saint-Esprit bridge, and finally the Grenet bridge. The Saint-Esprit bridge connects the Saint-Esprit district to the Amiral-Bergeret dock just upstream of the confluence with the river Nive. In 1845, the old bridge, originally made of wood, was rebuilt in masonry with seven arches supporting a deck 230 metres (750 feet) wide.[FL 3] It was then called the Nemours Bridge in honour of Louis of Orleans, sixth Duke of Nemours, who laid the first stone. The bridge was finally called Saint-Esprit. Until 1868 the bridge had a moving span near the left bank. It was expanded in 1912 to facilitate the movement of horse-drawn carriages and motor vehicles.[FL 3]

On the Nive coming from upstream to downstream there is the A63 bridge then the Pont Blanc (White bridge)[Note 26] railway bridge, and then D810 bridge, the Génie bridge (or Pont Millitaire), the Pannecau bridge, the Marengo bridge[Note 27] leading to the covered markets, and the Mayou Bridge.[Note 28] The Pannecau bridge was long named Bertaco bridge and was rebuilt in masonry under Napoleon III.[FL 4] According to François Lafitte Houssat, "[...] a municipal ordinance of 1327 provided for the imprisonment of any quarrellsome woman of bad character in an iron cage dropped into the waters of the Nive River from the bridge. The practice lasted until 1780 [...]"[FL 4] This punishment bore the evocative name of cubainhade.[DN 2]

Cycling network Edit

The commune is traversed by the Vélodyssée. Bicycle paths are located along the left bank of the Adour, a large part of the left bank of the Nive, and along various axes of the city where there are some bicycle lanes. The city offers free bicycles on loan.[68]

Public transport Edit

Urban network Edit

Most of the lines of the Chronoplus bus network operated by the Transdev agglomeration of Bayonne link Bayonne to other communes in the urban transport perimeter: Anglet, Biarritz, Bidart, Boucau, Saint-Pierre-d'Irube and Tarnos[Note 29][69] The Bayonne free shuttle Bayonne serves the city centre (Grand and Petit Bayonne) by connecting several parking stations; other free shuttles perform other short trips within the commune.

Interurban networks Edit

Bayonne is connected to many cities in the western half of the department such as Saint-Jean-de-Luz and Saint-Palais by the Pyrenees-Atlantiques long-distance coach network of Transport 64 managed by the General Council. Since the network restructuring in the summer of 2013, the lines converge on Bayonne.[70] Bayonne is also served by services from the Landes departmental network, XL'R.[71]

Rail transport Edit

The Gare de Bayonne is located in the Saint-Esprit district and is an important station on the Bordeaux-Irun railway. It is also the terminus of lines leading from Toulouse to Bayonne and from Bayonne to Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port. It is served by TGV, Intercités, Intercités de nuit, and TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine trains (to Hendaye, Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, Dax, Bordeaux, Pau, and Tarbes).

Air transport Edit

Bayonne is served by the Biarritz – Anglet – Bayonne Airport (IATA code: BIQ • ICAO code: LFBZ), located on the communal territories of Anglet and Biarritz.[Note 30] The airport was returned to service in 1954 after repair of damage from bombing during the Second World War.

Demographics Edit

In 2017, the commune had 51,228 inhabitants.

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1793 12,578—    
1800 13,190+0.68%
1806 14,006+1.01%
1821 13,248−0.37%
1831 14,773+1.10%
1836 15,912+1.50%
1841 17,303+1.69%
1846 18,120+0.93%
1851 18,870+0.81%
1856 26,187+6.77%
1861 25,611−0.44%
1866 26,333+0.56%
1872 27,173+0.52%
1876 27,416+0.22%
1881 26,261−0.86%
1886 27,289+0.77%
1891 27,192−0.07%
1896 26,918−0.20%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1901 27,601+0.50%
1906 26,488−0.82%
1911 27,886+1.03%
1921 28,215+0.12%
1926 31,436+2.19%
1931 31,727+0.18%
1936 31,350−0.24%
1946 32,620+0.40%
1954 32,575−0.02%
1962 36,941+1.58%
1968 42,743+2.46%
1975 42,938+0.07%
1982 41,381−0.53%
1990 40,051−0.41%
1999 40,078+0.01%
2007 44,498+1.32%
2012 45,855+0.60%
2017 51,228+2.24%
Source: EHESS[72] and INSEE[73]

Education Edit

Bayonne commune is attached to the Academy of Bordeaux. It has an information and guidance center (CIO).[74]

As of 14 December 2015, Bayonne had 10 kindergartens, 22 elementary or primary schools (12 public and 10 private primary schools including two ikastolas). 2 public colleges (Albert Camus and Marracq colleges), 5 private colleges (La Salle Saint-Bernard, Saint Joseph, Saint-Amand, Notre-Dame and Largenté) which meet the criteria of the first cycle of second degree studies. For the second cycle Bayonne has 3 public high schools (René-Cassin school (general education), the Louis de Foix school (general, technological and vocational education), and the Paul Bert vocational school), 4 private high schools (Saint-Louis Villa Pia (general education), Largenté, Bernat Etxepare (general and technological), and Le Guichot vocational school).

There are also the Maurice Ravel Conservatory of Music, Dance, and Dramatic Art and the art school of the urban community of Bayonne-Anglet-Biarritz.

Culture Edit

Cultural festivities and events Edit

 
Fêtes de Bayonne 2004, King Léon.
 
The Bayonne Bullfighting ring

For 550 years every holy Thursday, Friday and Saturday the Foire au Jambon (Ham festival) is held to mark the beginning of the season.[75][Note 31]

An annual summer festival has been held in the commune since 1932 for five days[Note 32] organized around parades, bulls races, fireworks, and music in the Basque and Gascon tradition. These festivals have become the most important festive events in France in terms of attendance.

Bayonne has the oldest French bullfighting tradition. A bylaw regulating the encierro is dated 1283: cows, oxen and bulls are released each year in the streets of Petit Bayonne during the summer festivals. The current arena, opened in 1893, is the largest in South-west France with more than 10,000 seats. A dozen bullfights are held each year, attracting the biggest names in bullfighting. Throughout summer several novilladas also take place. The city is a member of the Union of French bullfighting cities.

Health Edit

Bayonne is the focus of much of the hospital services for the agglomeration of Bayonne and the southern Landes. In this area all inhabitants are less than 35 km from a hospital offering medical, obstetrical, surgical, or psychiatric care. The hospitals for all the Basque Coast are mainly established in Bayonne (the main site of Saint-Léon and Cam-de-Prats) and also in Saint-Jean-de-Luz which has several clinics.[76]

Sports Edit

 
Bayonne Rowing Boat shed
  • Rowing, a popular sport for a long time on the Nive and the Adour near Bayonne. There are two clubs: the Nautical Society of Bayonne (SNB) (established in 1875) and Aviron Bayonnais—established in 1904 by former members of the SNB and which later became a sports club.
  • Basketball. Denek Bat Bayonne Urcuit is a basketball club with a male section competing in NM1 (3rd national level of the French league). The club is based in the city of Urcuit but plays in the Lauga Sports Palace in Bayonne.
  • Football. Aviron Bayonnais FC play their home games at Didier Deschamps Stadium in Championnat National 3 (the 5th French division) since the 2013–2014 season after a year in CFA and three consecutive years in the Championnat National. Didier Deschamps started his career at Aviron Bayonnais FC. The stadium, formerly called the Grand Basque, is now named after him. There are also three other football clubs in Bayonne: the Crusaders of Saint Andrew playing in the higher regional division, the Portuguese stars of Bayonne (first district division), and the Bayonne association on the right bank of the river (3rd district division).
  • Omnisports. Aviron Bayonnais, created in 1904, includes many sports sections and a large number of members.[Note 33] The pro rugby and football club are the most famous sections of the club. The Bayonne Olympic Club, created in 1972, is located in the district of Hauts de Sainte-Croix. The club offers a wide range of sports including pelote, gymnastics, combat sports, and a pool section. The club had nearly 400 members in 2007.
  • Basque Pelota Bayonne is an important place for Basque pelota. The French Federation of Basque Pelota is headquartered at Trinquet moderne near the Bullring.[77] Many titles were won by pelota players from the city. The World Championships took place in Bayonne in 1978 in association with Biarritz.[78]
  • Rugby appeared in Basque Country at the end of the 19th century with the arrival in 1897 at Bayonne High School of a 20-year-old person from Landes who converts his comrades to football-rugby which he had discovered in Bordeaux.[79] Practicing in the fields near the Spanish Gate, they communicated their enthusiasm to other colleges in Bayonne and Biarritz leading to the creation of the Biarritz Sporting Club and Biarritz Stadium which merged in 1913 to become Biarritz Olympique. Bayonne has two rugby clubs: The Bayonne Athletic Association (ASB) plays in Fédérale 3 while the Aviron Bayonnais rugby pro in the 2014–2015 season played in Top 14, where they have played without interruption since the 2004–2005 season. Aviron Bayonnais has won three league titles in France (1913, 1934 and 1943). It was the first club from a small town to become champion of France. Its stadium is the Stade Jean Dauger. There is also a women's team in the ASB, playing in the National Division 1B. This team won the 2014 Armelle Auclair challenge.[citation needed]

Religion Edit

Christian worship Edit

Bayonne is in the Diocese of Bayonne, Lescar and Oloron, with a suffragan bishop since 2002 under the Archdiocese of Bordeaux.[80] Monseigneur Marc Aillet has been the bishop of this diocese since 15 October 2008. The diocese is located in Bayonne in the Place Monseigneur-Vansteenberghe.

Besides Bayonne Cathedral in Grand Bayonne, Bayonne has Saint-Esprit, Saint Andrew (Rue des Lisses), Arènes (Avenue of the Czech Legion), Saint-Étienne, and Saint-Amand (Avenue Marechal Soult) churches.

The Carmel of Bayonne, located in the Marracq district, has had a community of Carmelite nuns since 1858.

The Way of Baztan (also ruta del Baztan or camino Baztanés) is a way on the pilgrimage of Camino de Santiago which crosses the Pyrenees further west by the lowest pass (by the Col de Belate, 847 m). It is the ancient road used by pilgrims descending to Bayonne then either along the coast on the Way of Soulac or because they landed there from England, for example, to join the French Way as soon as possible in Pamplona. The Way of Bayonne joins the French Way further downstream at Burgos.

The Protestant church is located at the corner of Rue Albert-I st and Rue du Temple.[81] A gospel church is located in the Saint-Esprit districtit where there is also a church belonging to the Gypsy Evangelical Church of the Protestant Federation of France.[82]

Jewish worship Edit

The synagogue was built in 1837 in the Saint-Esprit district north of the town.[83] The Jewish community of Bayonne is old—it consists of different groups of fugitives from Navarre and Portugal who established at Saint-Esprit-lès-Bayonne after the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492 and Portugal in 1496. In 1846, the Central Consistory moved to Saint-Esprit which was integrated with Bayonne in 1857.[citation needed]

Economy Edit

 
Rue Poissonnerie, a shopping street in Grand-Bayonne.
 
Bayonne ham.
 
Dark Chocolate with Espelette pepper.

Population and income tax Edit

In 2011, the median household income tax was €22,605, placing Bayonne 28,406th place among the 31,886 communes with more than 49 households in metropolitan France.[84]

In 2011, 47.8% of households were not taxable.[Insee 1]

Employment Edit

In 2011, the population aged from 15 to 64 years was 29,007 persons of which 70.8% were employable, 60.3% in employment and 10.5% unemployed.[Insee 2] While there were 30,012 jobs in the employment area, against 29,220 in 2006, and the number of employed workers residing in the employment area was 17,667, the indicator of job concentration is 169.9% which means that the employment area offers nearly two jobs to for every available worker.[Insee 3]

Businesses and shops Edit

Bayonne is the economic capital of the agglomeration of Bayonne and southern Landes. The table below details the number of companies located in Bayonne according to their industry:[Insee 4]

Structure of the Economy in Bayonne as at 1 January 2013.
No. of Establishments
TOTAL 4,665
Industry 270
Construction 375
Trade, transport and services 3,146
Public Administration, education, health, and social services 874
Scope: Commercial activities excluding Agriculture.

The table below shows employees by business establishments in terms of numbers:[Insee 5]

Active establishments by sector of activity on 31 December 2011.
Total % 0
Staff
1 to 9
Staff
10 to 19
Staff
20 to 49
Staff
50 Staff
or more
Ensemble 5,946 100.0 3,797 1,708 213 155 73
Agriculture, sylviculture and fishing 46 0.8 38 6 0 2 0
Industry 292 4.9 150 101 23 15 3
Construction 428 7.2 299 84 26 15 4
Trade, transport, services 3,953 66.5 2,390 1,346 117 73 27
including trade and car repair 1,115 18,8 579 457 38 32 >9
Public Administration, education, health, social services 1,227 20.6 920 171 47 50 39
Scope: All activities.

The following comments apply to the two previous tables:[Note 34]

  • the bulk of economic activity is provided by companies in the tertiary sector;
  • Agriculture is almost non-existent Note 54;[Note 35]
  • less than 5% of the activity is from the industrial sector which remains focused on establishments of less than 50 employees, as also are construction-related activities;
  • public administration, education, health and social services are activities of over 20% of establishments, confirming the importance of Bayonne as an administrative centre.

In 2013, 549 new establishments were created in Bayonne including 406 Sole proprietorships.[Insee 6][Insee 7]

Workshops and Industry Edit

Bayonne has few such industries, as indicated in the previous tables. There is Plastitube specializing in plastic packaging (190 employees).[76] The Izarra liqueur company set up a distillery in 1912 at Quai Amiral-Bergeret and has long symbolized the economic wealth of Bayonne. Industrial activities are concentrated in the neighbouring communes of Boucau, Tarnos (Turbomeca), Mouguerre, and Anglet.

Bayonne is known for its fine chocolates, produced in the town for 500 years, and Bayonne ham, a cured ham seasoned with peppers from nearby Espelette. Izarra, the liqueur made in bright green or yellow colours, is distilled locally. It is said by some that Bayonne is the birthplace of mayonnaise, supposedly a corruption of Bayonnaise, the French adjective describing the city's people and produce. Now bayonnaise can refer to a particular mayonnaise flavoured with the Espelette chillis.

Bayonne is now the centre of certain craft industries that were once widespread, including the manufacture of makilas, traditional Basque walking-sticks. The Fabrique Alza just outside the city is known for its palas, bats used in pelota, the traditional Basque sport.

Service activities Edit

The active tertiary sector includes some large retail chains such as those detailed by geographer Roger Brunet:[76] BUT (240 staff), Carrefour (150 staff), E.Leclerc (150 staff), Leroy Merlin (130 staff), and Galeries Lafayette (120 employees). Banks, cleaning companies (Onet, 170 employees), and security (Brink's, 100 employees) are also major employers in the commune, as is urban transport which employs nearly 200 staff. Five health clinics, providing a total of more than 500 beds, each employ 120 to 170 staff.[76]

The port of Bayonne Edit

 
The cargo ship BBC-Magellan in the port of Bayonne in 2014.

The port of Bayonne is located at the mouth of the Adour, downstream of the city. It also occupies part of communes of Anglet and Boucau in Pyrenees-Atlantiques and Tarnos in Landes.[85] It benefits greatly from the natural gas field of Lacq to which it is connected by pipeline. This is the ninth largest French port for trade with an annual traffic of about 4.2 million tonnes of which 2.8 is export. It is also the largest French port for export of maize.[76] It is the property of the Aquitaine region who manage and control the site.[86] Metallurgical products movement are more than one million tons per year and maize exports to Spain vary between 800,000 and 1 million tons. The port also receives refined oil products from the TotalEnergies oil refinery at Donges (800,000 tons per year). Fertilizers are a traffic of 500,000 tons per year and sulphur from Lacq, albeit in sharp decline, is 400,000 tons.[76][87]

The port also receives Ford and General Motors vehicles from Spain and Portugal and wood both tropical and from Landes.[76]

Tourism services Edit

Due to its proximity to the ocean and the foothills of the Pyrenees as well as its historic heritage, Bayonne has developed important activities related to tourism.[Insee 8]

On 31 December 2012 there were 15 hotels in the city offering more than 800 rooms to visitors, but there were no camp sites.[Insee 9] The tourist infrastructure in the surrounding urban area of Bayonne complements the local supply with around 5800 rooms spread over nearly 200 hotels and 86 campsites offering over 14,000 beds.[88]

Sights Edit

 
The Château Vieux

The Nive divides Bayonne into Grand Bayonne and Petit Bayonne with five bridges between the two, both quarters still being backed by Vauban's walls. The houses lining the Nive are examples of Basque architecture, with half-timbering and shutters in the national colours of red and green. The much wider Adour is to the north. The Pont Saint-Esprit connects Petit Bayonne with the Quartier Saint-Esprit across the Adour, where the massive Citadelle and the railway station are located. Grand Bayonne is the commercial and civic hub, with small pedestrianised streets packed with shops, plus the cathedral and Hôtel de Ville.

The Cathédrale Sainte-Marie is an imposing, elegant Gothic building, rising over the houses, glimpsed along the narrow streets. It was constructed in the 12th and 13th centuries. The south tower was completed in the 16th century but the cathedral was only completed in the 19th century with the north tower. The cathedral is noted for its charming cloisters. There are other details and sculptures of note, although much was destroyed in the Revolution.

Nearby is the Château Vieux, some of which dates back to the 12th century, where the governors of the city were based, including the English Black Prince.

 
Sainte-Marie Cathedral

The Musée Basque is the finest ethnographic museum of the entire Basque Country. It opened in 1922 but has been closed for a decade recently for refurbishment. It now has special exhibitions on Basque agriculture, seafaring and pelota, handicrafts and Basque history and way of life.

The Musée Bonnat began with a large collection bequeathed by the local-born painter Léon Bonnat. The museum is one of the best galleries in south west France and has paintings by Edgar Degas, El Greco, Sandro Botticelli, and Francisco Goya, among others.

At the back of Petit Bayonne is the Château Neuf, among the ramparts. Now an exhibition space, it was started by the newly arrived French in 1460 to control the city. The walls nearby have been opened to visitors. They are important for plant life now and Bayonne's botanic gardens adjoin the walls on both sides of the Nive.

The area across the Adour is largely residential and industrial, with much demolished to make way for the railway. The Saint-Esprit church was part of a bigger complex built by Louis XI to care for pilgrims to Santiago de Compostela. It is home to a wooden Flight into Egypt sculpture.

Overlooking the quarter is Vauban's 1680 Citadelle. The soldiers of Wellington's army who died besieging the citadelle in 1813 are buried in the nearby English Cemetery, visited by Queen Victoria and other British dignitaries when staying in Biarritz.

The distillery of the famous local liqueur Izarra is located on the northern bank of the Adour and is open to visitors.

 
Citadel

Notable people Edit

1200s Edit

1500s Edit

1700s Edit

1800s Edit

1900s Edit

In popular culture Edit

Notes and references Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Achille Luchaire, Annals of the Faculty of Letters of Bordeaux (1879), note 12 and 24, regarding the Notitia Provinciarum mentioning the civitas Boatium (var. Boasium, Bohatium, Boaccensium, Boacium) "whose identification with Bayonne, proposed by Scaliger and Valois, is absolutely inadmissible (see Desjardins, Gaule rom., II, 874, note 1)" (in French).
  2. ^ Neanderthal Stone tools (from 80,000 to 45,000 BC corresponding to the Mousterian period, the Riss Glaciations, and Würm II)
  3. ^ Sigillata ceramics of red brick colour, the resulting relief decoration is decorated before firing by stamping
  4. ^ The Notitia Dignitatum imperii Romani, dating from 340 to 420 AD, mentions the seat of the tribune of the cohort of Novempopulania in these terms: "In provincia Novempopulana tribunus cohortis Novempopulanae Lapurdo"
  5. ^ Gérard Coulon, The Gallo-Romains: life, work, beliefs, diversions—54 BC – 486 AD, Paris, 2006, Errance, Hespérides collection, ISBN 2-87772-331-3, p. 21 (in French), retains the number 10 hectares.
  6. ^ According to Eugène Goyheneche in Basque Country: Soule, Labourd, Lower Navarre, Société nouvelle d’éditions régionales et de diffusion, Pau, 1979, BnF FRBNF34647711, the old Roman wall which is still visible in parts was in the shape of a polygon of 1,125 metres (3,691 feet) perimeter in an area of 6 to 9 hectares (15–22 acres).
  7. ^ Peter Hourmat, (History of Bayonne from its origins to the French Revolution of 1789, Society of Sciences Letters Arts of Bayonne,1986, pp. 27 to 35 (in French))deplores the lack of sources for the period 5th century to the 10th century: "If the existence of a major military site is attested by the remains of the tower walls of a castrum, the headquarters or refuge of a cohort in the last days of the Roman Empire, in the half a millennium that followed the collapse of the latter plunges us into an almost total ignorance of who occupied the area of the castrum and the identity of the people. A heavy silence covers the fate of Lapurdum and documents at our disposal for five centuries can be counted on the fingers of one hand and these lead to different or contradictory interpretations ... . So this story becomes a long series of question marks, for example that of Novempopulania".
  8. ^ The Treaty of Andelot signed in 587 between Guntram, king of Burgundy, and Brunhilda of Austrasia, mentions Lapurdo; it documents the return to Brunhilda of several cities including Aire, Couserans and Lapurdo, each "with its territories" ("cum terminibus"). Manex Goyhenetche indicates that in the 6th century, the term civitas was used to designate a fortress. "The Frankish dynasties of Austrasia and Neustria by the Treaty of Andelot, consolidated their grip on part of the former territory of the Nine Peoples [...] In the 4th century Lapurdum continued to exist and by the end of the 6th century returned to its function as a fortress. Lapurdum controlled firstly the routes leading to the Pyrenean passes and secondly the cabotage routes of the Frankish fleets from Bordeaux to Asturias ".
  9. ^ The Vicount resided in Chatelet (lou Castet), next to the entry to the current Cinq Cantons (Five Cantons) which was the Roman gate leading to the port source: Eugene Goyheneche, The Basque Country: Soule, Labourd, Lower Navarre, New Society regional editions and distribution, Pau, 1979 (Record BNF FRBNF34647711).
  10. ^ It can be deduced that it existed prior to that date.
  11. ^ Relations with Labourd were often difficult and caused many bloody conflicts. The most famous of them took place in 1343 when the mayor of Bayonne, Pé de Poyane, killed five labourdin nobles: an episode which, according to Eugene Goyheneche, had its origin in a fictional story of On the Proudines bridge at Villefranque, retold by Augustine Chaho and Hippolyte Taine.
  12. ^ For example a Bayonnais fleet participated in the Siege of Calais led by the English in 1346 which consisted of 15 vessels and 439 men source: Eugene Goyheneche, The Basque Country: Soule, Labourd, Lower Navarre, Society new regional editions and distribution, Pau,1979 (Record BNF FRBNF34647711), p. 163. (in French).
  13. ^ The siege lasted nine days from 12 to 20 August 1451 according to Pierre Hourmat, History of Bayonne origins to the French Revolution of 1789, Society of Arts Science & Arts of Bayonne,1986, p. 143.
  14. ^ Two annual fairs: one on the first day of Lent and the other 1 August: "[...] grant them free fairs in perpetuity of all Aydes, imposicions, impostz and any other subsidies qualxconques, which one will be held the first day of karesme and the other on the first day of August [...]" as letters patent of Louis XI established at Montferrand in May 1462.
  15. ^ Francis I was replaced as a captive by his two eldest sons: Francis III, Duke of Brittany, and Henry II of France who were finally released in 1530 after payment of the ransom.
  16. ^ The Forges of the Adour were actually located in the commune of Boucau on the right bank of the river.
  17. ^ This blazon was effective 3 August 1919, by the municipal council of the city of Bayonne, quoted by René Broca in the preface of the book History of Bayonne from its origins to the French Revolution of 1789, Pierre Hourmat, Corporation Sciences Humanities & Arts, Bayonne, 1986
  18. ^ The second Gare de Bayonne succeeded an earlier station made of wood and metal built in 1854 at the beginning of the 20th century
  19. ^ It was in these terms that the newspaper Le Courrier de Bayonne recounted the event a few days later.
  20. ^ The Courrier de Bayonne of 8 August 1914 described the departure of the Regiment in the following terms: "[...] As for the trains which carried our brave little poilus of the 49th, they were adorned with flowers. On the wagons were pleasant or patriotic inscriptions. We noted the following: "Pleasure Train for Berlin, out and back"; on others: "Vive la France! Long live England ! Long live Russia !" were framed by garlands and on the locomotives were the flags of the three countries fraternally chattering in the wind ... If the Germans saw it, perhaps they would not be very sure of victory. [...]" (Source: Maurice Sacx, Bayonne and the Basque Country—Witnesses of history, Biarritz, Basque Museum of Bayonne, 1968).
  21. ^ The Avenue of the Czech Legion in Bayonne is in their honour.
  22. ^ The Polish company was cited in an order of the Army dated 21 June 1918, by General Petain (source: François Lafitte Houssat, Bayonne Nive and Adour, Joue-les-Tours, Alan Sutton, 2001 (ISBN 2-84253-557-X)).
  23. ^ The shooting took place at the Saint-Léon crossroads near the train station and near the citadel.
  24. ^ The Château-Neuf was completed in 1507 by Roger de Gramont.
  25. ^ In Gascony and in Basque country, alluvial floodplains along a river are called barthe (from the Gascon barta).
  26. ^ The successor to the iron railway bridge Raccordement d'Aïtachouria, the Pont Blanc has been used since 2003 to link the Floride Sports Field to the wilderness area on the Ansot plain.
  27. ^ The Marengo masonry bridge was under Napoleon III.
  28. ^ The Mayou bridge, formerly called Major or Maior, was rebuilt in stone in 1857.
  29. ^ The A1, A2, B, C, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 14 and N lines (as at 9 September 2014)
  30. ^ Only a quarter of the area, the west end of the runway, is located in Biarritz commune.
  31. ^ In 2014, the Ham Festival was held from 17 to 20 April
  32. ^ Bayonne Celebrations traditionally begin on the Wednesday preceding the first weekend of August but the schedule has been changed and the start of celebrations has been advanced in recent years because the crowds become too large. They end the following Sunday.
  33. ^ There are 20 sports sections including the Aviron Bayonnais pro rugby and Aviron Bayonnais FC according to the Aviron Bayonnais FC website 9 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine (accessed 29 July 2014).
  34. ^ These remarks are not the result of a statistical study of the data presented; they are only indicative.
  35. ^ Part of the commune is part of the town is in the appellation d'origine controlee (AOC) zone of Ossau-Iraty but there were no producers in 2014.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Répertoire national des élus: les maires". data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises (in French). 2 December 2020.
  2. ^ "Populations légales 2020". The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. 29 December 2022.
  3. ^ INSEE commune file.
  4. ^ Comparateur de territoire: Commune de Bayonne (64102), Aire d'attraction des villes 2020 de Bayonne (partie française) (047), INSEE (in French)
  5. ^ Inhabitants of Pyrénées-Atlantiques (in French)
  6. ^ Euskaltzaindia, Academy of the Basque language, consulted on 5 August 2014 (in French)
  7. ^ Baiona, Auñamendi Eusko Entziklopedia (in Spanish)
  8. ^ Hector Iglesias, Names of Places and people in Bayonne, Anglet and Biarritz in the 18th century 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine, éditions Elkar, Donostia-Saint-Sébastien, 2000, consulted on 25 July 2014, ISBN 2-913156-32-0, p. 34 (in French)
  9. ^ Xavier Delamarre, Dictionary of the Gallic language. A linguistic approach to continental old Celtic, éditions Errance, Paris, 2003, ISBN 2-87772-237-6, p. 48 (in French)
  10. ^ General Toponymy of France, Ernest Nègre, 28 July 2014 (in French)
  11. ^ General Toponymy of France, Ernest Nègre, 28 July 2014 (in French)
  12. ^ a b Jean-Baptiste Orpustan, New Basque Toponymy, Presses universitaires de Bordeaux, 2006, ISBN 2 86781 396 4 p. 19, 26 (in French)
  13. ^ a b Topographic Dictionary of the Department of Basses-Pyrenees, Paul Raymond, Imprimerie nationale, 1863, Digitised from Lyon Public Library 15 June 2011 (in French)
  14. ^ Eugène Goyheneche, Goyheneche, 1973, "Lapurdum ...", p. 85–92 (in French)
  15. ^ Bayonne on the 1750 Cassini Map
  16. ^ Bayonne on the 1790 Cassini Map
  17. ^ Chapter of Bayonne in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques (in French)
  18. ^ Manuscript from the 14th century in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques (in French)
  19. ^ Titles published by don José Yanguas y Miranda in Diccionario de Antiguedades del reino de Navarra, 1840, Pamplona, (in Spanish)
  20. ^ Association Lauburu, The Cathedral in the heart of the city, 1992 (in French)
  21. ^ a b Eugène Goyheneche, Bayonne and the Bayonnaise Region from the 12th to the 15th century, Thesis by the E.N.C., 1949 (in French)
  22. ^ Pierre Laborde. History of Bayonne, 1991 (in French).
  23. ^ Charles Athanase Walckenaer, Ancient Historical Geography and comparison of the Cisalpine and Transalpine Gauls, followed by a geographical analysis of ancient routes and accompanied by a nine map Atlas, Vol. 1, P. Dufart, 1839, 1085 pages (in French).
  24. ^ In The Week in Basque Country, M. Esteban, March 1996 (in French)
  25. ^ On the presumed origin of the division of the Basque language, Hector Iglesias, consulted on 5 August 2014 (in French).
  26. ^ Renée Mussot-Goulard, The Gascons, Atlantica, 2001 (in French)
  27. ^ Jacques Allières, The Basques, Paris, Presses universitaires de France,?March 2003 (1st ed. 1997), 127 p. ISBN 213053144X and ISBN 9782130531449, OCLC 77097933. (in French)
  28. ^ Manex Goyhenetche, General History of Basque country, Prehistory, Roman era, Middle Ages, Vol. 1, Elkarlanean, Donostia and Bayonne, 1998, 492 pages, ISBN 2-913156-20-7, BnF FRBNF37031711, p. 134 (in French).
  29. ^ On 12 April 1215 John, King of England, granted Bayonne a legal personality that would last throughout the Middle Ages and, to some extent, until the French Revolution. The form of the charter resembled that of La Rochelle. According to Eugene Goyheneche, "the city is governed by the "Hundred Peers" who were actually a mayor, twelve deputies, twelve councilors, and seventy-five peers who were co-opted and proposed each year by the mayor for the king's choice. The mayor was head of the administrative, judiciary, and military: he had custody of the keys to the city and some mayors were admirals in the bayonnaise fleet. The king was represented by a marshal" source: Eugene Goyheneche, The Basque Country: Soule, Labourd, Lower Navarre, Societe new regional editions and distribution, Pau, 1979 (Record BNF FRBNF34647711) (in French).
  30. ^ Léon Cadier, , A. Picard, Paris, 1885, 92 pages, consulted 16 June 2014 (in French).
  31. ^ Gascon Registers, Vol. 1, pp. 44, 53, 141, 154, 158–159, 195, and 233—cited by Manex Goyhenetche, General History of Basque Country III: Economic and social revolution from the 16th to the 18th century, Vol. 3, Donostia / Bayonne, Elkarlanean,? 2001, 411 p. (ISBN 8483317443 and ISBN 9788483317440, OCLC 466971263), p. 42–43. (in French)
  32. ^ Ferdinand Barbe, The Epidemics of pestilence in Bayonne in the 16th century, Bulletin de la Société des sciences et lettres de Bayonne, 1947—cited by Manex Goyhenetche, General History of Basque Country III: Economic and social revolution from the 16th to the 18th century, Vol. 3, Donostia / Bayonne, Elkarlanean,? 2001, 411 p. (ISBN 8483317443 and ISBN 9788483317440, OCLC 466971263), p. 42. (in French)
  33. ^ Vincent Hiribarren, Bayonne at the beginning of the Wars of Religion, Revue d’histoire de Bayonne, du Pays basque et du Bas-Adour, Vol. 159, 2004, p. 95–122 (in French).
  34. ^ Vincent Hiribarren, For God, King, and the good of the city, Bayonne deliberations from 1565 to 1569, Memoir by Maitrise under the direction of Denis Crouzet, université Paris IV-Sorbonne, June 2003, 137 p. (in French)
  35. ^ Vincent Hiribarren, A lion at the head of a thousand sheep. the Sorhaindo family in Bayonne at the end of the 16th century, Vol. 166, Bulletin of the Basque museum, 2005, p. 19–34. (in French)
  36. ^ Pierre Hourmat, Bulletin SSLAB, Collection No. 157, The City of Bayonne Library, p. 257 (in French).
  37. ^ Pierre Hourmat, Bulletin SSLAB, Collection No. 158, The City of Bayonne Library, p. 158 (in French).
  38. ^ François Noel, L. J. M. Carpentier, Puissant (Mr.), New Dictionary of the origins, inventions, and discoveries in arts, sciences, geography, agriculture, commerce etc., Janet et Cotelle, 1833, p. 143 (in French)
  39. ^ Pierre Hourmat, Vauban and the fortifications of Pyrénées-Atlantiques, Société des Sciences Lettres & Arts de Bayonne, 1984, p. 32 (in French).
  40. ^ Eugène Goyheneche, Our Basque Land, Société nouvelle d’éditions régionales et de diffusion, Pau, 1979, BnF FRBNF33028848, p. 93 (in French).
  41. ^ Des villages de Cassini aux communes d'aujourd'hui: Commune data sheet Saint-Esprit, EHESS (in French)..
  42. ^ a b Paul Robert Magocsi; Jean W. Sedlar; Robert A. Kann; Charles Jelavich; Joseph Rothschild (1974). A History of East Central Europe. University of Washington Press. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-295-95358-8. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  43. ^ In The week in Basque Country, T. Laxalt, February 1996. (in French)
  44. ^ Claude Duhau, Mayors and Councilors of Bayonne (1831–2001), 1999, p. 80 (in French).
  45. ^ Louis Poullenot, Lower Pyrénées Occupation Liberation 1940–1945, J&D Éditions, Biarritz, 1995, p. 246 (in French).
  46. ^ Jacques Navarret, The Port of Bayonne – Congrès 1999, p. 293 (in French).
  47. ^ In The week in Basque Country, J. Crouzet, August 1994. (in French)
  48. ^ a b c d e Olivier Ribeton, A Gramont Museum at Bayonne, Publication of the Société des Sciences, Lettres et Arts de Bayonne, Bayonne, 1986 (in French).
  49. ^ List of Mayors of France (in French)
  50. ^ Decree No. 2014-248 of 25 February 2014 concerning the delimitation of cantons in the department of Pyrénées-Atlantiques, consulted on 9 March 2015 (in French)
  51. ^ List of competent jurisdictions for Bayonne, Ministry of Justice website (in French).
  52. ^ Pyrénées-Atlantiques Communal database 19 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine, consulted on 9 March 2015 (in French).
  53. ^ The Bayonne-San Sebastián Eurocity, GEIE, consulted on 9 March 2015 (in French).
  54. ^ Statutes of the basque Bayonne-San Sebastián Eurocity, GEIE, consulted on 9 March 2015 (in French).
  55. ^ "National Commission for Decentralised cooperation". Délégation pour l’Action Extérieure des Collectivités Territoriales (Ministère des Affaires étrangères) (in French). Retrieved 14 December 2015.
  56. ^ Bayonne on Google Maps
  57. ^ Geographic Repertoire of communes 8 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine, published by the Institut géographique national (in French)
  58. ^ Sandre. "Fiche cours d'eau - L'Adour (Q---0000)".
  59. ^ The Adour in the Natura 2000 network 14 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Institution Adour website, consulted on 23 August 2014 (in French)
  60. ^ Page FR7200724 Natura 2000, National Inventory of Natural heritage website, consulted on 23 August 2014 (in French)
  61. ^ Bayonne on the Géoportail from National Geographic Institute (IGN) website (in French)
  62. ^ Paris, Nice, Strasbourg, Brest
  63. ^ Data from the Station at Biarritz from 1981 to 2010 (in French)
  64. ^ (in French). Meteo France. Archived from the original on 20 February 2020. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  65. ^ (in French). Meteo France. Archived from the original on 20 May 2019. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  66. ^ (PDF). Fiche Climatologique: Statistiques 1981–2010 et records (in French). Meteo France. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 March 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  67. ^ "Normes et records 1961–1990: Biarritz-Anglet (64) – altitude 69m" (in French). Infoclimat. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  68. ^ The bicycle in town – City of Bayonne 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Bayonne official website, consulted on 6 October 2014 (in French)
  69. ^ Chronoplus Network Map 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine, consulted on 25 July 2014 (in French).
  70. ^ Network map 26 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Transports 64, consulted on 11 September 2014 (in French).
  71. ^ , consulted on 11 September 2014 (in French).
  72. ^ Des villages de Cassini aux communes d'aujourd'hui: Commune data sheet Bayonne, EHESS (in French).
  73. ^ Population en historique depuis 1968, INSEE
  74. ^ Schools in Bayonne (in French)
  75. ^ The Foire au jambon, consulted on 29 July 2014 (in French).
  76. ^ a b c d e f g Roger Brunet personal website, consulted on 5 August 2014 (in French).
  77. ^ The headquarters of the French Federation of Basque Pelota, retrieved 5 August 2014 (in French).
  78. ^ Photos of the French delegation at the World championships for Basque pelota, consulted on 5 August 2014 (in French).
  79. ^ Marie-France Chauvirey, Life in olden days in Basque country, Éditions Sud Ouest, Luçon, 1994, ISBN 2 87901 219 8, p. 157 (in French).
  80. ^ The Diocese of Bayonne, Lescar and Oloron, consulted on 9 March 2015 (in French).
  81. ^ The Temple of Bayonne, Reformed Church consulted on 29 July 2014 (in French).
  82. ^ List of Evangelical churches in Pyrénées-Atlantiques, consulted on 29 July 2014 (in French).
  83. ^ Community of Bayonne, consulted on 13 September 2014 (in French).
  84. ^ Page RFDM2011COM: Local Fiscal Revenue by household, 2011, consulted on 30 July 2014 (20mb+) (in French).
  85. ^ The Port of Bayonne 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, official website, consulted on 14 September 2014 (in French).
  86. ^ The port of Bayonne 14 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine, official website, consulted on 14 September 2014 (in French).
  87. ^ Traffic in the port of Bayonne in 2008 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Port of Bayonne official website, consulted on 14 September 2014 (in French).
  88. ^ Key Tourism statistics for the Urban area of Bayonne at 31 December 2012 14 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine, consulted on 14 September 2014.

Insee Edit

  • Dossier 2013 relative to the commune,
  1. ^ REV T1 – Taxes on the income of households.
  2. ^ EMP T1 – Population from 15 to 64 years by type of activity.
  3. ^ EMP T5 – Employment and Activity.
  4. ^ DEN T5 – Number of establishments by sector of activity on 1 January 2013.
  5. ^ CEN T1 – Active establishments by sector of activity on 31 December 2011.
  6. ^ DEN T1 – Creation of Enterprises by sector of activity in 2011.
  7. ^ DEN T2 – Creation of individual entreprises by sector of activity in 2011.
  8. ^ EMP T8 – Employment by sector of activity (in French).
  9. ^ TOU T1 – Number and capacity of hotels at 31 December 2012 (in French).
  • National Database

Bibliographic sources Edit

  • Leon H. Histoire des Juifs de Bayonne, Paris, Armand Durlacher, 1893. in-4 : xvj, 436 pp. ; illustré de 4 planches hors-texte.
  • Pierre Dubourg-Noves Bayonne, Ouest-France, 1986, ISBN 2 85882 609 9 (in French). Noted "DN" in the text.
  1. ^ p. 27.
  2. ^ p. 20.
  • Eugène Goyheneche, Basque Country: Soule, Labourd, Lower-Navarre, Société nouvelle d’éditions régionales et de diffusion, Pau, 1979, BnF FRBNF34647711 (in French). Noted "EG" in the text.
  1. ^ p. 149.
  2. ^ a b c d p. 152.
  3. ^ p. 171.
  4. ^ p. 160.
  5. ^ p. 162.
  6. ^ p. 163.
  7. ^ p. 187.
  8. ^ p. 417.
  9. ^ p. 418.
  • Pierre Hourmat, History of Bayonne from its origins to the French Revolution of 1789, Société des Sciences Lettres & Arts de Bayonne, 1986 (in French). Noted "PH" in the text.
  1. ^ p. 159.
  2. ^ p. 142.
  3. ^ p. 160.
  4. ^ p. 164.
  5. ^ p. 214.
  6. ^ p. 511.
  7. ^ a b c d p. 4
  8. ^ a b c p. 3
  • Pierre Hourmat Visiting Bayonne, Sud Ouest, 1989 (in French). Noted "PiH" in the text.
  1. ^ a b p. 3.
  2. ^ p. 152.
  3. ^ p. 6.
  4. ^ a b p. 11.
  5. ^ p. 18.
  6. ^ p. 25.
  7. ^ p. 24.
  8. ^ p. 30.
  • Bayonne of the Nive and Adour, François Lafitte Houssat, Alan Sutton, Joué-lès-Tours, 2001, ISBN 2-84253-557-X (in French). Noted as "FL" in the text.
  1. ^ a b p. 54.
  2. ^ p. 55.
  3. ^ a b p. 118.
  4. ^ a b p. 25.
  • The Bayonne Official website. Noted as "M" in the text.

External links Edit

  • City council website (in French)


bayonne, other, uses, disambiguation, french, bajɔn, basque, baiona, gascon, baiona, baˈjunɔ, spanish, bayona, city, southwestern, france, near, spanish, border, commune, subprefectures, pyrénées, atlantiques, department, nouvelle, aquitaine, region, baiona, b. For other uses see Bayonne disambiguation Bayonne French bajɔn Basque Baiona bai ona Gascon Baiona baˈjunɔ Spanish Bayona is a city in Southwestern France near the Spanish border It is a commune and one of two subprefectures in the Pyrenees Atlantiques department in the Nouvelle Aquitaine region 3 Bayonne Baiona Basque Subprefecture and communeView of the historic centreFlagCoat of armsLocation of BayonneBayonneShow map of FranceBayonneShow map of Nouvelle AquitaineCoordinates 43 29 N 1 29 W 43 49 N 1 48 W 43 49 1 48CountryFranceRegionNouvelle AquitaineDepartmentPyrenees AtlantiquesArrondissementBayonneCantonBayonne 1 2 and 3IntercommunalityCA Pays BasqueGovernment Mayor 2020 2026 Jean Rene Etchegaray 1 UDI Area121 68 km2 8 37 sq mi Population Jan 2020 2 52 006 Density2 400 km2 6 200 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST INSEE Postal code64102 64100Elevation0 55 m 0 180 ft avg 4 m or 13 ft 1 French Land Register data which excludes lakes ponds glaciers gt 1 km2 0 386 sq mi or 247 acres and river estuaries Bayonne is located at the confluence of the Nive and Adour rivers in the northern part of the cultural region of the Basque Country It is the seat of the Communaute d agglomeration du Pays Basque which roughly encompasses the western half of Pyrenees Atlantiques including the coastal city of Biarritz This area also constitutes the southern part of Gascony where the Aquitaine Basin joins the beginning of the Pre Pyrenees Together with nearby Anglet Biarritz Saint Jean de Luz as well as several smaller communes Bayonne forms an urban area with 273 137 inhabitants at the 2018 census 51 411 residents lived in the commune of Bayonne proper 4 It is also a part of Basque Eurocity Bayonne San Sebastian The site on the left bank of the Nive and the Adour was probably occupied before ancient times a fortified enclosure was attested in the 1st century at the time when the Tarbelli occupied the territory Archaeological studies have confirmed the presence of a Roman castrum a stronghold in Novempopulania at the end of the 4th century before the city was populated by the Vascones citation needed In 1023 Bayonne was the capital of Labourd In the 12th century it extended to the confluence and beyond of the Nive River At that time the first bridge was built over the Adour The city came under the domination of the English in 1152 through the marriage of Eleanor of Aquitaine it became militarily and above all commercially important thanks to maritime trade In 1177 Richard the Lion Heart of England took control of it separating it from the Viscount of Labourd citation needed In 1451 the city was taken by the Crown of France after the Hundred Years War The loss of trade with the English was followed by the river gradually filling with silt and becoming impassable to ships As the city developed to the north its position was weakened compared to earlier times The district of Saint Esprit developed initially from settlement by Sephardic Jewish refugees fleeing the Spanish expulsions dictated by the Alhambra Decree This community brought skill in chocolate making and Bayonne gained a reputation for chocolate citation needed The course of the Adour was changed in 1578 by dredging under the direction of Louis de Foix and the river returned to its former mouth Bayonne flourished after regaining the maritime trade that it had lost for more than a hundred years In the 17th century the city was fortified by Vauban whose works were followed as models of defense for 100 years citation needed In 1814 Bayonne and its surroundings were the scene of fighting between the Napoleonic troops and the Spanish Anglo Portuguese coalition led by the Duke of Wellington It was the last time the city was under siege citation needed In 1951 the Lacq gas field was discovered in the region its extracted sulphur and associated oil are shipped from the port of Bayonne During the second half of the 20th century many housing estates were built forming new districts on the periphery The city developed to form a conurbation with Anglet and Biarritz this agglomeration became the heart of a vast Basque Landes urban area citation needed In 2014 Bayonne was a commune with more than 45 000 inhabitants the heart of the urban area of Bayonne and of the Agglomeration Cote Basque Adour This includes Anglet and Biarritz It is an important part of the Basque Bayonne San Sebastian Eurocity and it plays the role of economic capital of the Adour basin Modern industry metallurgy and chemicals have been established to take advantage of procurement opportunities and sea shipments through the harbour Business services today represent the largest source of employment Bayonne is also a cultural capital a city with strong Basque and Gascon influences and a rich historical past Its heritage is expressed in its architecture the diversity of collections in museums its gastronomic specialties and traditional events such as the noted Fetes de Bayonne The inhabitants of the commune are known as Bayonnais or Bayonnaises 5 Contents 1 Toponymy 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Old attestations 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Ancient times 2 3 Middle Ages 2 4 Renaissance and modern times 2 5 French Revolution and Empire 2 6 19th and 20th Centuries 2 7 The World Wars 3 Policy and administration 3 1 List of mayors under the Ancien Regime 3 2 Modern times 3 3 Cantons of Bayonne 3 4 Judicial and administrative proceedings 3 5 Intercommunality 3 6 Twin towns Sister cities 4 Geography 4 1 Geology and relief 4 2 Hydrography 4 3 Climate 5 Transport 5 1 Road 5 2 Bridges 5 3 Cycling network 5 4 Public transport 5 4 1 Urban network 5 4 2 Interurban networks 5 4 3 Rail transport 5 4 4 Air transport 6 Demographics 7 Education 8 Culture 8 1 Cultural festivities and events 9 Health 10 Sports 11 Religion 11 1 Christian worship 11 2 Jewish worship 12 Economy 12 1 Population and income tax 12 2 Employment 12 3 Businesses and shops 12 4 Workshops and Industry 12 5 Service activities 12 6 The port of Bayonne 12 7 Tourism services 13 Sights 14 Notable people 14 1 1200s 14 2 1500s 14 3 1700s 14 4 1800s 14 5 1900s 15 In popular culture 16 Notes and references 16 1 Notes 16 2 References 16 2 1 Insee 16 2 2 Bibliographic sources 17 External linksToponymy EditEtymology Edit While the modern Basque spelling is Baiona and the same in Gascon Occitan 6 7 the name Bayonne poses a number of problems both historical and linguistic which have still not been clarified 8 There are different interpretations of its meaning The termination onne in Bayonne can come from many in hydronyms onne or toponyms derived from that In certain cases the element onne follows an Indo European theme ud r n Greek hudōr giving hydro Gothic watt meaning water hence udna meaning water giving unna then onno in the glossary of Vienne 9 Unna therefore would refer to the Adour This toponymic type evoking a river traversing a locality is common The appellative unna seems to be found in the name of the Garonne Garunna 1st century Garonna 4th century However it is possible to see a pre Celtic suffix ona in the name of the Charente Karantona in 875 or the Charentonne Carentona in 1050 10 It could also be an augmentative Gascon from the original Latin radical Baia with the suffix ona in the sense of vast expanse of water or a name derived from the Basque bai meaning river and ona meaning good hence good river The proposal by Eugene Goyheneche repeated by Manex Goyhenetche and supported by Jean Baptiste Orpustan is bai una the place of the river or bai ona hill by the river Ibai means river in Basque and muinoa means hill It has perhaps been lost from sight that many urban place names in France from north to south came from the element Bay or Bayon such as Bayons Bayonville Bayonvillers and pose the unusual problem of whether they are Basque or Gascon adds Pierre Hourmat PiH 1 However the most ancient form of Bayonne Baiona clearly indicates a feminine or a theme of a whereas this is not the case for Beon or Bayon In addition the Bayon in Bayonville or Bayonvillers in northern France is clearly the personal Germanic name Baio 11 Old attestations Edit The names of the Basque province of Labourd and the locality of Bayonne have been attested from an early period with the place name Bayonne appearing in the Latin form Lapurdum after a period during which the two names could in turn designate a Viscounty or Bishopric 12 Labourd and Bayonne were synonymous and used interchangeably until the 12th century before being differentiated Labord for the province and Bayonne for the city 12 The attribution of Bayonne as Civitas Boatium a place mentioned in the Antonine Itinerary and by Paul Raymond in his 1863 dictionary has been abandoned The city of the Boiates may possibly be La Teste de Buch but is certainly not Bayonne Note 1 The following table details the origins of Labord Bayonne and other names in the commune Name Spelling Date Source Page Origin DescriptionBayonne Tribunus cohortis Novempopulanoe Lapurdo Raymond 24 Notary of Provinces CityIn provincia Novempopulana tribunus cohortis Novempopulanae in Lapurdo fifth century Goyheneche 85 92Lapurdum sixth century Raymond 24 Gregory of ToursEpiscopatus Lasburdensis 983 Raymond 88 ChapterSancta Maria Lasburdensis 983 Raymond 24 ChapterSancta Maria Baionensis 1105 Raymond 24 Cartularycivitas de Baiona 1140 Raymond 24 CartularyBaione 13th century Raymond 24 DuchesneBayona 1248 Raymond 24 CamaraBayone 1253 Raymond 24 CamaraBaionne 14th century GuiartBayonne 1750 Cassini 1750Bayonne 1790 Cassini 1790Baiona 19th century LhandeBalichon Molendinum de la Mufala Balaisson 1198 Raymond 24 Cartulary Old millBalaichon 1259 Raymond 24 CartularyMolin de le Muhale 1259 Raymond 24 CartularyMolin de la Muffale 1259 Raymond 24 Cartularylo pont de Belaischon 1259 Raymond 24 CartularyBaleyson 1331 Raymond 20 Gascon rolesBaleychoun 1334 Raymond 20 Gascon rolesBenac Benac 1863 Raymond 27 FarmBouroutchourry Bouroutchourry 1863 Raymond 35 FarmGlain Fons de Coquoanhea 1387 Raymond 72 Chapter FarmCamps 17th century Raymond 72 Archives of BayonneJean d Amou Jean d Amou 1863 Raymond 85 HamletLachepaillet Lo portau de Lachepailhet 1516 Raymond 88 Chapter District it was once the name of one of the city gates which was previously called the Portail de Tarride Largente Largente 1863 Raymond 94 FarmLes Lauriers Les Lauriers 1863 Raymond 97 HamletLesperon L Esperon 1246 Raymond 100 Cartulary Farm at Saint EspritLes Murailles Les Murailles 1863 Raymond 120 FarmPanecau Port de Bertaco 13th century Raymond 131 Cartulary BridgePe de Navarre Pe de Navarre 1863 Raymond 133 FarmChateau Weymann Chateau Weymann 1863 Raymond 175 ChateauSources Raymond Topographic Dictionary of the Department of Basses Pyrenees 1863 on the page numbers indicated in the table in French 13 Goyheneche according to the Notitia Dignitatum Imperii dating from 340 to 420 14 Guiart Guillaume Guiart around 1864 Lhande Basque French Dictionary by Pierre Lhande 1926 Cassini 1750 1750 Cassini Map 15 Cassini 1790 1790 Cassini Map 16 Origins Chapter Titles of the Chapter of Bayonne 17 Cartulary Cartulary of Bayonne or Livre d Or Book of Gold 18 Camara Chapters of the Camara de Comptos 19 History EditPrehistory Edit In the absence of accurate objective data there is some credence to the probable existence of a fishing village on the site in a period prior to ancient times Numerous traces of human occupation have been found in the Bayonne region from the Middle Paleolithic especially in the discoveries at Saint Pierre d Irube a neighbouring locality Note 2 On the other hand the presence of a mound about 14 metres 46 feet high has been detected in the current Cathedral Quarter overlooking the Nive which formed a natural protection and a usable port on the left bank of the Nive At the time the mound was surrounded north and west by the Adour swamps At its foot lies the famous Bayonne Sea the junction of the two rivers which may have been about 1 200 metres 3 900 feet wide between Saint Esprit and the Grand Bayonne and totally covered the current location of Bourg Neuf in the district of Petit Bayonne To the south the last bend of the Nive widens near the Saint Leon hills 20 21 Despite this the narrowing of the Adour valley allows easier crossing than anywhere else along the entire length of the estuary 22 In conclusion the strategic importance of this height was so obvious it must be presumed that it has always been inhabited 21 Ancient times Edit nbsp Map of Novempopulania indicating the position of the Tarbelli territory north west of the Pyrenees The oldest documented human occupation site is located on a hill overlooking the Nive and its confluence with the Adour PiH 1 In the 1st century AD during the Roman occupation Bayonne already seems to have been of some importance since the Romans surrounded the city with a wall to keep out the Tarbelli Aquitani or the proto Basque who then occupied a territory that extended south of modern day Landes to the modern French Basque country the Chalosse the valleys of the Adour the mountain streams of Pau Pyrenees Atlantiques and to the Gave d Oloron 23 The archaeological discoveries of October and November 1995 provided a shred of evidence to support this projection In the four layers of sub soil along the foundation of the Gothic cathedral in the apse of the cathedral area a 2 metre depth was found of old objects from the end of the 1st century in particular sigillated Gallic ceramics from Montans imitating Italian styles thin walled bowls and fragments of amphorae Note 3 In the southern sector near the cloister door there were objects from the second half of the 1st century as well as coins from the first half of the 3rd century 24 A very high probability of human presence not solely military seems to provisionally confirm the occupation of the site at least around the third century citation needed A Roman castrum dating to the end of the 4th century has been proven as a fortified place of Novempopulania Named Lapurdum the name became the name of the province of Labourd Note 4 According to Eugene Goyheneche the name Baiona designated the city the port and the cathedral while that of Lapurdum was only a territorial designation 25 This Roman settlement was strategic as it allowed the monitoring of the trans Pyrenean roads and of local people rebellious to the Roman power The construction covered 6 to 10 hectares according to several authors 26 Note 5 Note 6 Middle Ages Edit The geographical location of the locality at the crossroads of a river system oriented from east to west and the road network connecting Europe to the Iberian Peninsula from north to south predisposed the site to the double role of fortress and port EG 1 The city after being Roman alternated between the Vascones and the English for three centuries from the 12th to the 15th century citation needed The Romans left the city in the 4th century and the Basques who had always been present dominated the former Novempopulania province between the Garonne the Ocean and the Pyrenees citation needed Novempopulania was renamed Vasconia and then Gascony after a Germanic deformation resulting from the Visigoth and Frankish invasions Basquisation of the plains region was too weak against the advance of romanization From the mixture between the Basque and Latin language Gascon was created 27 Documentation on Bayonne for the period from the High Middle Ages are virtually nonexistent Note 7 Note 8 28 with the exception of two Norman intrusions one questionable in 844 and a second attested in 892 EG 2 When Labourd was created in 1023 Bayonne was the capital and the Viscount resided there Note 9 The history of Bayonne proper started in 1056 when Raymond II the Younger Bishop of Bazas had the mission to build the Church of Bayonne Note 10 EG 2 The construction was under the authority of Raymond III of Martres Bishop of Bayonne from 1122 to 1125 combined with Viscount Bertrand for the Romanesque cathedral the rear of which can still be seen today and the first wooden bridge across the Adour extending the Mayou bridge over the Nive which inaugurated the heyday of Bayonne EG 2 From 1120 new districts were created under population pressure The development of areas between the old Roman city of Grand Bayonne and the Nive also developed during this period then between the Nive and the Adour at the place that became Petit Bayonne A Jacobin Convent was located there in 1225 then that of the Cordeliers in 1247 EG 2 Construction of and modifications to the defences of the city also developed to protect the new districts PiH 2 In 1130 the King of Aragon Alfonso the Battler besieged the city without success Bayonne came under English rule when Eleanor of Aquitaine married Henry II of England in 1152 PiH 3 This alliance gave Bayonne many commercial privileges The Bayonnaises became carriers of Bordeaux wines and other south western products like resin ham and woad to England EG 3 Bayonne was then an important military base In 1177 King Richard separated the Viscounty of Labourd whose capital then became Ustaritz Like many cities at the time in 1215 Bayonne obtained the award of a municipal charter and was emancipated from feudal powers 29 The official publication in 1273 of a Coutume unique to the city remained in force for five centuries until the separation of Bayonne from Labourd EG 4 Note 11 Bayonnaise industry at that time was dominated by shipbuilding wood oak beech chestnut from the Pyrenees and pine from Landes being overabundant EG 5 There was also maritime activity in providing crews for whaling commercial marine or and it was often so at a time when it was easy to turn any merchant ship into a warship the English Royal Navy EG 6 Note 12 Renaissance and modern times Edit nbsp View of the ramparts overlooking the river nbsp The Bartizan on the Redoubt restored in 2005 nbsp The Ramparts of Bayonne Jean de Dunois a former companion at arms of Joan of Arc captured the city on 20 August 1451 and annexed it to the Crown without making too many victims but at the cost of a war indemnity of 40 000 gold Ecus payable in a year PH 1 thanks to the opportunism of the bishop who claimed to have seen a large white cross surmounted by a crown which turns into a fleur de lis in the sky to dissuade Bayonne from fighting against the royal troops Note 13 PH 2 The city continued to be fortified by the kings of France to protect it from danger from the Spanish border In 1454 Charles VII created a separate judicial district the Seneschal of Lannes 30 a single subdivision of Guyenne during the English period which had jurisdiction over a wide area including Bayonne Dax and Saint Sever and which exercised civil justice criminal jurisdiction within the competence of the district councilors Over time the Seneschal of the Sword which was at Dax lost any role other than protocol and Bayonne along with Dax and Saint Sever became the de facto seat of a separate Seneschal under the authority of a lieutenant general of the Seneschal PH 3 In May 1462 King Louis XI authorized the holding of two annual fairs Note 14 by letters patent after signing the Treaty of Bayonne after which it was confirmed by the coutoumes of the inhabitants in July 1472 following the death of Charles de Valois Duke de Berry the king s brother PH 4 At the time the Spanish Inquisition raged in the Iberian Peninsula Spanish and Portuguese Jews fled Spain and also later Portugal then settled in Southern France including in Saint Esprit Pyrenees Atlantiques a northern district of Bayonne located along the northern bank of the Adour river They brought with them chocolate and the recipe for its preparation DN 1 In 1750 the Jewish population in Saint Esprit Pyrenees Atlantiques is estimated to have reached about 3 500 people The golden age of the city ended in the 15th century with the loss of trade with England and the silting of the port of Bayonne created by the movement of the course of the Adour to the north EG 7 At the beginning of the 16th century Labourd suffered the emergence of the plague Its path can be tracked by reading the Registers 31 In July 1515 the city of Bayonne was prohibited to welcome people from plague stricken places and on 21 October we inhibit and prohibit all peasants and residents of this city to go Parish Bidart because of the contagion of the plague On 11 April 1518 the plague raged in Saint Jean de Luz and the city of Bayonne inhibited and prohibited for all peasants and city inhabitants and other foreigners to maintain relationships at the location and Parish of Saint Jean de Luz where people have died of the plague On 11 November 1518 plague was present in Bayonne to the point that in 1519 the city council moved to the district of Brindos Berindos at the time in Anglet 32 In 1523 Marshal Odet of Foix Viscount of Lautrec resisted the Spaniards under Philibert of Chalon in the service of Charles V and lifted the siege of Bayonne PiH 4 It was at Chateau Vieux that the ransom demand for the release of Francis I taken prisoner after his defeat at the Battle of Pavia was gathered PiH 4 Note 15 The meeting in 1565 between Catherine de Medici and the envoy of Philip II the Duke of Alba is known as the Interview of Bayonne At the time that Catholics and Protestants tore each other apart in parts of the kingdom of France Bayonne seemed relatively untouched by these troubles 33 An iron fist from the city leaders did not appear to be unknown In fact they never hesitated to use violence and criminal sanctions for keeping order in the name of the public good 34 Two brothers Saubat and Johannes Sorhaindo who were both lieutenants of the mayor of Bayonne in the second half of the 16th century perfectly embody this period They often wavered between Catholicism and Protestantism but always wanted to ensure the unity and prestige of the city 35 In the 16th century the king s engineers under the direction of Louis de Foix were dispatched to rearrange the course of the Adour by creating an estuary to maintain the river bed The river discharged in the right place to the Ocean on 28 October 1578 PH 5 The port of Bayonne then attained a greater level of activity Fishing for cod and whale ensured the wealth of fishermen and shipowners From 1611 to 1612 the college Principal of Bayonne was a man of 26 years old with a future Cornelius Jansen known as Jansenius the future Bishop of Ypres Bayonne became the birthplace of Jansenism an austere science which strongly disrupted the monarchy of Louis XIV 36 37 During the sporadic conflicts that troubled the French countryside from the mid 17th century Bayonne peasants were short of powder and projectiles They attached the long hunting knives in the barrels of their muskets and that way they fashioned makeshift spears later called bayonets 38 In that same century Vauban was charged by Louis XIV to fortify the city He added a citadel built on a hill overlooking the district of San Espirit Cap deou do Punt 39 nbsp The Redoubt a system of fortifications destroyed at the beginning of the 20th century seen from the Quai de l Amiral Lesseps French Revolution and Empire Edit Activity in Bayonne peaked in the 18th century The Chamber of Commerce was founded in 1726 PiH 5 Trade with Spain the Netherlands the Antilles the cod fishery off the shores of Newfoundland and construction sites maintained a high level of activity in the port PH 6 In 1792 the district of Saint Esprit that revolutionaries renamed Port de la Montagne 40 located on the right bank of the Adour was separated from the city and renamed Jean Jacques Rousseau 41 It was reunited with Bayonne on 1 June 1857 For 65 years the autonomous commune was part of the department of Landes PiH 6 In 1808 at the Chateau of Marracq the act of abdication of the Spanish king Charles IV in favour of Napoleon was signed under the friendly pressure of the Emperor In the process the Bayonne Statute was initialed as the first Spanish constitution EG 8 Also in 1808 the French Empire imposed on the Duchy of Warsaw the Convention of Bayonne to buy from France the debts owed to it by Prussia 42 The debt amounting to more than 43 million francs in gold was bought at a discounted rate of 21 million francs 42 However although the duchy made its payments in installments to France over a four year period Prussia was unable to pay it due to a very large indemnity it owed to France resulting from Treaties of Tilsit causing the Polish economy to suffer heavily Trade was the wealth of the city in the 18th century but suffered greatly in the 19th century severely sanctioned by conflict with Spain its historic trading partner in the region PiH 7 The Siege of Bayonne marked the end of the period with the surrender of the Napoleonic troops of Marshal Jean de Dieu Soult who were defeated by the coalition led by Wellington on 5 May 1814 EG 9 19th and 20th Centuries Edit In 1854 the railway arrived from Paris bringing many tourists eager to enjoy the beaches of Biarritz Bayonne turned instead to the steel industry with the forges of the Adour Note 16 The Port took on an industrial look but its slow decline seemed inexorable in the 19th century The discovery of the Lacq gas field restored a certain dynamism citation needed The Treaty of Bayonne was concluded on 2 December 1856 It overcame the disputes in fixing the Franco Spanish border in the area extending from the mouth of the Bidassoa to the border between Navarre and Aragon citation needed nbsp Arms of Bayonne Paul Raymond noted in 1863 that the arms of the city were blazoned Azure a tower embattled and ramparted of Argent wavy proper in base cantoned to dexter with a letter N crowned of Or between two pines Vert each fructed of seven Or and set with fruit pal debruised by two lions langued confronting 13 The current arms are Blazoned Note 17 Gules a tower turreted of Or masooned windowed and porte of Sable on a sea wavy of Azure Or and Sable in base and surmounted by a fleur de lis of Or between two oaks proper fructed seven of Or debruised by two lions langued confronting of Or the arms stamped with a county crown The city built three light railway lines to connect to Biarritz at the beginning of the 20th century The most direct line that of the Tramway Bayonne Lycee Biarritz was operated from 1888 to 1948 In addition a line further north served Anglet operated by the Chemin de fer Bayonne Anglet Biarritz company from 1877 to 1953 Finally a line following the Adour to its mouth and to the Atlantic Ocean by the bar in Anglet was operated by VFDM reseau basque from 1919 to 1948 citation needed nbsp The second Gare de Bayonne photographed here in the 1930s Note 18 On the morning of 23 December 1933 sub prefect Anthelme received Gustave Tissier the director of the Credit Municipal de Bayonne He responded well with some astonishment to his persistent interview It did not surprise him to see the man unpacking what became the scam of the century citation needed Tissier director of the Credit Municipal was arrested and imprisoned under suspicion of forgery and misappropriation of public funds He had issued thousands of false bonds in the name of Credit Municipal Note 19 This was the beginning of the Stavisky Affair which together with other scandals and political crises led to the Paris riots of 6 February 1934 43 44 The World Wars Edit The 249th Infantry Regiment created from the 49th Infantry Regiment was engaged in operations in the First World War including action at Chemin des Dames especially on the plateau of Craonne FL 1 700 Bayonnaises perished in the conflict FL 1 Note 20 A centre for engagement of foreign volunteers was established in August 1914 in Bayonne Many nationalities were represented particularly the Spanish the Portuguese the Czechs Note 21 and the Poles Note 22 FL 2 During the Second World War Bayonne was occupied by the 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf from 27 June 1940 to 23 August 1944 PiH 8 On 5 April 1942 the Allies made a landing attempt in Bayonne but after a barge penetrated the Adour with great difficulty the operation was canceled 45 On 21 August 1944 after blowing up twenty ships in port 46 German troops withdrew On the 22nd a final convoy of five vehicles passed through the city It transported Gestapo Customs agents and some elements of the Feldgendarmerie One or more Germans opened fire with machine guns killing three people Note 23 47 On the 23rd there was an informal and immediate installation of a special municipal delegation by the young deputy prefect Guy Lamassoure representing the Provisional Government of the French Republic which had been established in Algiers since 27 June Policy and administration EditList of mayors under the Ancien Regime Edit The Gramont family provided captains and governors in Bayonne from 1472 to 1789 as well as mayors a post which became hereditary from 28 January 1590 by concession of Henry IV to Antoine II of Gramont From the 15th century they resided in the Chateau Neuf then in the Chateau Vieux from the end of the 16th century 48 Note 24 Roger de Gramont 1444 1519 Lord of Gramont Baron of Haux Seneschal of Guyenne hereditary mayor of Bayonne He was an advisor and chamberlain of Louis XI in 1472 and then Charles VIII in 1483 He was Ambassador for Louis XII in Rome in 1502 He became governor of Bayonne and its castles on 26 February 1487 He died of the plague in 1519 48 Jean II de Gramont Lord of Gramont mayor and captain of Bayonne from 18 March 1523 On 15 September 1523 as a lieutenant in the company of Marshal Lautrec he rescued Bayonne from the siege by the forces of Charles V under the command of the Prince of Orange He died during the wars in Italy 48 Antoine I of Gramont born in 1526 he was appointed at the age of nine years 1535 as mayor and captain of Bayonne In 1571 he charged Louis de Foix with the changes to the mouth of the Adour along the fortifications of the city Antoine II de Gramont 1572 1644 Count of Gramont Guiche and Toulonjon Viscount then Count of Louvigny ruler of Bidache Viscount of Aster lord then baron of Lescun He was a Duke de Brevet in 1643 but unverified by Parliament On 28 January 1590 Henry IV granted him and his descendants the perpetual office of Mayor of Bayonne He then became the Viceroy of Navarre In 1595 Antoine II de Gramont charged Jean Errard 1599 then Louis de Millet 1612 to strengthen the defenses of the city Antoine III of Gramont Touloujon 1604 1678 Count and then in 1648 Duke of Gramont Prince of Bidache Count of Guiche Toulonjon and Louvigny Viscount of Astern Baron of Andouins and Hagetmau and lord of Lesparre peer of France in 1648 Marshal of France in 1641 As Ambassador of Louis XIV in 1660 he sought the hand of the Infanta Maria Theresa The king gave him power of attorney to represent him in the marriage which was celebrated in Madrid It was he who welcomed Louis XIV Anne of Austria Mazarin and the rest of the Court to Bayonne He died on 12 July 1678 at the Chateau Vieux 48 Antoine Charles IV of Gramont 1641 1720 Duke of Gramont Prince of Bidache Count of Guiche and Louvigny Viscount of Aster Baron of Andouins and Hagetmau Lord of Lesparre peer of France Viceroy of Navarre In 1689 he continued the fortification works undertaken by Vauban in Bayonne where he remained from 1706 to 1712 He supported Philip V during the War of the Spanish Succession using Bayonne to supply his troops weapons reinforcements and subsidies In retaliation the opponents of Philip V organized two attacks in 1707 one at Chateau Vieux leaving Antoine IV unharmed 48 Modern times Edit List of Successive Mayors 49 Mayors from 1725 to 1941From To Name1725 Matthieu de Bruix1726 Jean de Moracin1728 Francois de Poheyt1730 Leon Dubrocq1732 Pierre Commarieu1736 Jean Desbiey1738 Jean Louis Rol Montpellier1740 Joseph Dulivier1745 Leon Brethous1749 Joseph Dantes1750 Dominique Behic1752 Francois Casaubon Maisonneuve1754 Jean Baptiste Picot1756 Martin Bretous1758 Jean Desbiey1760 Jean Francois Dubrocq1762 Jean Rol de Montpellier1764 Martin Antoine Bretous1766 Jacques Pastoureau1768 Joseph de Sorhainde1770 Martin Castera1772 Pierre Larue1774 Dominique Duhagon1775 Jean Pierre de Nogue1776 Lasserre1778 Pierre Anselme Monho1780 Joachim Dubrocq1782 Etienne Lalanne1785 Joseph Verdier1788 Jacques Poydenot1790 Dominique Dubrocq1791 Charles Lasserre1791 Paul Faurie1792 Jean Pierre Joseph de Basterreche1793 Leclerc1794 Johaneau1795 Dufourcq1798 Barthelemy Poydenot1798 Sauvine1800 Paum Lacroix Ravignan1803 1806 Joseph Laborde Noguez1806 Chrysostome Dechegaray1815 Martin Charles Chegaray1816 Arnaud Fourcade1818 Alexandre Betbeder1824 Antoine Robert d Hirairt1829 Joachim Alexandre Dubrocq1830 1832 Bernard Lanne1832 1833 Joseph Arnaud Eugene de Basterreche1833 1848 Francois Balasque1848 1849 Eugene Boutouey1849 1850 Joachim Alexandre Dubrocq1852 1869 Jules Labat1871 1876 Jules Seraphin Chateauneuf1876 1881 Jacques Theodore Plantie1881 1884 Edouard Seraphin Haulon1884 1885 Jacques Leon Portes1885 1888 Joseph Edouard Viard1888 1908 Gabriel Leo Pouzac1908 1919 Joseph Garat1919 1925 Jules Prosper Castagnet1925 1934 Joseph Garat1934 1935 Jules Lafourcade1935 1941 Pierre Simonet Mayors from 1941From To Name Party Position1941 1944 Marcel Ribeton1944 1945 Jean Labourdique1945 1947 Jean Pierre Brana1947 1958 Maurice Delay Surgeon1958 1959 Georges Forsans1959 1995 Henri Grenet UDF Surgeon1995 2014 Jean Grenet UDI MP Chairman of the Adour Basque Coast agglomeration 2008 20142014 2026 Jean Rene Etchegaray UDI President of the Adour Basque Coast agglomerationCantons of Bayonne Edit As per the Decree of 22 December 1789 Bayonne was part of two cantons Bayonne North east which includes part of Bayonne commune plus Boucau Saint Pierre d Irube Lahonce Mouguerre and Urcuit and Bayonne Northwest which consisted of the rest of Bayonne commune plus Anglet Arcangues and Bassussarry In a first revision of cantons in 1973 three cantons were created from the same total geographic area Bayonne North Bayonne East and Bayonne West A further reconfiguration in 1982 focused primarily on Bayonne and apart from Bayonne North Canton which also includes Boucau the cantons of Bayonne East and Bayonne West did not change Starting from the 2015 French departmental elections which took place on 22 and 29 March a new division took effect following the decree of 25 February 2014 50 Once again three cantons centred on Bayonne are defined Bayonne 1 with part of Anglet Bayonne 2 which includes Boucau and Bayonne 3 now define the cantonal territorial division of the area Judicial and administrative proceedings Edit Bayonne is the seat of many courts for the region It falls under the jurisdiction of the Tribunal d instance District court of Bayonne the Tribunal de grande instance High Court of Bayonne the Cour d appel Court of Appeal of Pau the Tribunal pour enfants Juvenile court of Bayonne the Conseil de prud hommes Labour Court of Bayonne the Tribunal de commerce Commercial Court of Bayonne the Tribunal administratif Administrative tribunal of Pau and the Cour administrative d appel Administrative Court of Appeal of Bordeaux 51 The commune has a police station a Departmental Gendarmerie an Autonomous Territorial Brigade of the district gendarmerie squadron 24 2 of Mobile Gendarmerie and a Tax collection office Intercommunality Edit The commune is part of twelve inter communal structures of which eleven are based in the commune 52 the Communaute d agglomeration du Pays Basque the transport association of Cote basque Adour Agglomeration STACBA the intercommunal association for the management of the Txakurrak centre the intercommunal association for the support of Basque culture the Bil Ta Garbi joint association the joint association for maritime Nive the joint association for the Basque Museum and the History of Bayonne the joint association for the development and monitoring of SCOT in the agglomeration of Bayonne and south Landes the Kosta Garbia joint association the joint association for the development of the European freight centre of Bayonne Mouguerre Lahonce the joint association for operating the regional Maurice Ravel Conservatory the Energy association of Pyrenees Atlantiques The city of Bayonne is part of the Communaute d agglomeration du Pays Basque which also includes Anglet Biarritz Bidart Boucau Hendaye and Saint Jean de Luz The statutory powers of the structure extend to economic development including higher education and research housing and urban planning public transport through Transdev alternative and the collection and recovery waste collection and management of rain and coastal waters the sustainable development interregional cooperation and finally 106 In addition Bayonne is part of the Basque Bayonne San Sebastian Eurocity which is a European economic interest grouping EEIG established in 1993 based in San Sebastian 53 54 Twin towns Sister cities Edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in France Bayonne has twinning associations with 55 nbsp Veliko Tarnovo Bulgaria since 2004 nbsp Satu Mare Roumania since 2008 nbsp Pamplona Spain since 1970 nbsp Nyiregyhaza Hungary since 2008 nbsp L Hospitalet de Llobregat since 2008 nbsp Kajaani Finland since 2008 nbsp Hydra Greece since 2008 nbsp Faro Portugal since 2008 nbsp Daytona Beach Florida United States since 1970 nbsp Bayonne New Jersey United States since 1970 nbsp Ascoli Piceno Italy since 2008Geography EditBayonne is located in the south west of France on the western border between Basque Country and Gascony It developed at the confluence of the Adour and tributary on the left bank the Nive 6 km from the Atlantic coast The commune was part of the Basque province of Labourd Geology and relief Edit Bayonne occupies a territory characterized by a flat relief to the west and to the north towards the Landes forest tending to slightly raise towards the south and east The city has developed at the confluence of the Adour and Nive 6 kilometres 3 7 miles from the ocean The meeting point of the two rivers coincides with a narrowing of the Adour valley Above this the alluvial plain extends for nearly thirty kilometres 19 miles towards both Tercis les Bains and Peyrehorade and is characterized by swampy meadows called barthes These were are influenced by floods and high tides Note 25 Downstream from this point the river has shaped a large wide bed in the sand dunes creating a significant bottleneck at the confluence The occupation of the hill that dominates this narrowing of the valley developed through a gradual spread across the lowlands Occupants built embankments and the aggradation from flood soil PH 7 The Nive has played a leading role in the development of the Bayonne river system in recent geological time by the formation of alluvial terraces these form the sub soil of Bayonne beneath the surface accumulations of silt and aeolian sands PH 8 The drainage network of the western Pre Pyrenees evolved mostly from the Quaternary from south east to northwest oriented east west The Adour was captured by the gaves and this system together with the Nive led to the emergence of a new alignment of the lower Adour and the Adour Nive confluence This capture has been dated to the early Quaternary 80 000 years ago PH 8 Before this capture the Nive had deposited pebbles from the Mindel glaciation of medium to large sizes this slowed erosion of the hills causing the bottleneck at Bayonne After the deposit of the lowest alluvial terrace 10 to 15 metres 33 49 feet high at Grand Bayonne the course of the Adour became fixed in its lower reaches PH 8 Subsequent to these deposits there was a rise in sea level in the Holocene period from 15 000 to 5000 years ago This explains the invasion of the lower valleys with fine sand peat and mud with a thickness of more than 40 metres 130 feet below the current bed of the Adour and the Nive in Bayonne These same deposits are spread across the barthes PH 7 In the late Quaternary the current topographic physiognomy was formed i e a set of hills overlooking a swampy lowland The promontory of Bassussarry Marracq ultimately extended to the Labourdin foothills The Grand Bayonne hill is an example Similarly on the right bank of the Nive the heights of Chateau Neuf Mocoron Hill met the latest advance of the plateau of Saint Pierre d Irube height 30 to 35 metres 98 115 feet PH 7 On the right bank of the Adour the heights of Castelnau today the citadel with an altitude of 35 to 40 metres 115 131 feet and Fort today Saint Esprit with an altitude of 20 to 25 metres 66 82 feet rise above the Barthes of the Adour the Nive Bourgneuf Saint Frederic Sainte Croix Aritxague and Pontots PH 7 The area of the commune is 2 168 hectares 5 360 acres and its altitude varies between 0 to 55 metres 0 180 feet 57 Hydrography Edit nbsp The confluence of the Adour and the Nive from the right bank of the Adour nbsp Confluence of the Nive in Bayonne in 1843 by Eugene de MalbosThe city developed along the river Adour 58 The river is part of the Natura 2000 network from its source at Bagneres de Bigorre to its exit to the Atlantic Ocean after Bayonne between Tarnos Landes for the right bank and Anglet Pyrenees Atlantiques for the left bank 59 60 Apart from the Nive which joins the left bank of the Adour after 79 3 kilometres 49 3 miles of a sometimes tumultuous course two tributaries join the Adour in Bayonne commune the Ruisseau de Portou and the Ruisseau du Moulin Esbouc Tributaries of the Nive are the Ruisseau de Hillans and the Ruisseau d Urdaintz which both rise in the commune 61 Climate Edit The nearest weather station is that of Biarritz Anglet The climate of Bayonne is relatively similar to that of its neighbour Biarritz described below with fairly heavy rainfall the oceanic climate is due to the proximity of the Atlantic Ocean The average winter temperature is around 8 C and is around 20 C in summer The lowest temperature recorded was 12 7 C on 16 January 1985 and the highest 40 6 C on 4 August 2003 in the 2003 European heat wave citation needed Rains on the Basque coast are rarely persistent except during winter storms They often take the form of intense thunderstorms of short duration Comparison of local Meteorological data with other cities in France 62 Town Sunshine nbsp hours yr Rain nbsp mm yr Snow nbsp days yr Storm nbsp days yr Fog nbsp days yr National average 1 973 770 14 22 40Bayonne 63 1920 1450 2 2 35 5 28 5Paris 1 661 637 12 18 10Nice 2 724 767 1 29 1Strasbourg 1 693 665 29 29 56Brest 1 605 1 211 7 12 75Climate data for Biarritz Anglet altitude 69 metres 226 feet 1981 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 23 4 74 1 28 9 84 0 29 7 85 5 32 1 89 8 34 8 94 6 39 2 102 6 39 8 103 6 40 6 105 1 37 0 98 6 32 2 90 0 27 8 82 0 25 1 77 2 40 6 105 1 Average high C F 12 0 53 6 12 8 55 0 15 0 59 0 16 2 61 2 19 6 67 3 22 1 71 8 24 1 75 4 24 7 76 5 23 2 73 8 20 0 68 0 15 1 59 2 12 5 54 5 18 1 64 6 Daily mean C F 8 4 47 1 8 9 48 0 11 0 51 8 12 4 54 3 15 6 60 1 18 3 64 9 20 4 68 7 20 8 69 4 18 8 65 8 16 0 60 8 11 4 52 5 9 0 48 2 14 3 57 7 Average low C F 4 8 40 6 5 0 41 0 7 0 44 6 8 5 47 3 11 6 52 9 14 6 58 3 16 7 62 1 17 0 62 6 14 5 58 1 11 9 53 4 7 7 45 9 5 5 41 9 10 4 50 7 Record low C F 12 7 9 1 11 5 11 3 7 2 19 0 1 3 29 7 3 3 37 9 5 3 41 5 9 2 48 6 8 6 47 5 5 3 41 5 0 6 30 9 5 7 21 7 8 9 16 0 12 7 9 1 Average precipitation mm inches 128 8 5 07 111 5 4 39 103 5 4 07 129 7 5 11 113 9 4 48 87 8 3 46 69 3 2 73 98 4 3 87 119 6 4 71 152 1 5 99 185 9 7 32 150 4 5 92 1 450 9 57 12 Average precipitation days 1 mm 13 4 12 0 11 9 13 6 12 9 10 4 8 8 9 6 9 7 12 5 13 0 12 6 140 5Average snowy days 0 8 1 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 5 3 0Average relative humidity 77 75 73 77 78 81 80 81 80 78 79 78 78 1Mean monthly sunshine hours 100 2 114 1 164 4 169 4 193 7 203 3 209 0 206 8 192 8 141 7 103 8 88 3 1 887 3Source 1 Meteo France 64 65 66 Source 2 Infoclimat fr humidity and snowy days 1961 1990 67 Transport Edit nbsp Public transport around Bayonne railway lines are black the intercity bus lines Pyrenees Atlantiques are green and those of Landes purple The PTU perimeter of urban transport which operates the Chronoplus network is uncharted here is bounded by a red line nbsp Means of transport water roads bridges and railways Road Edit Bayonne is located at the intersection of the A63 autoroute Bordeaux Spain and the D1 extension of the A64 autoroute towards Toulouse The city is served by three interchanges two of them on the A63 exit nbsp 6 Bayonne Nord serves the northern districts of Bayonne but also allows quick access to the centre while exit nbsp 5 Bayonne Sud provides access to the south and also serves Anglet The third exit is the D1 A64 via the Mousserolles interchange exit nbsp 1 Bayonne Mousserolles which links the district of the same name and also serves the neighbouring communes of Mouguerre and Saint Pierre d Irube Bayonne was traversed by Route nationale 10 connecting Paris to Hendaye but this is now downgraded to a departmental road D810 Route nationale 117 linking Bayonne to Toulouse has been downgraded to departmental road D817 Bridges Edit nbsp The Saint Esprit bridge over the Adour There are several bridges over both the Nive and the Adour linking the various districts Coming from upstream on the Adour there is the A63 bridge then the Saint Frederic bridge which carries the D 810 then the railway bridge that replaced the old Eiffel iron bridge the Saint Esprit bridge and finally the Grenet bridge The Saint Esprit bridge connects the Saint Esprit district to the Amiral Bergeret dock just upstream of the confluence with the river Nive In 1845 the old bridge originally made of wood was rebuilt in masonry with seven arches supporting a deck 230 metres 750 feet wide FL 3 It was then called the Nemours Bridge in honour of Louis of Orleans sixth Duke of Nemours who laid the first stone The bridge was finally called Saint Esprit Until 1868 the bridge had a moving span near the left bank It was expanded in 1912 to facilitate the movement of horse drawn carriages and motor vehicles FL 3 On the Nive coming from upstream to downstream there is the A63 bridge then the Pont Blanc White bridge Note 26 railway bridge and then D810 bridge the Genie bridge or Pont Millitaire the Pannecau bridge the Marengo bridge Note 27 leading to the covered markets and the Mayou Bridge Note 28 The Pannecau bridge was long named Bertaco bridge and was rebuilt in masonry under Napoleon III FL 4 According to Francois Lafitte Houssat a municipal ordinance of 1327 provided for the imprisonment of any quarrellsome woman of bad character in an iron cage dropped into the waters of the Nive River from the bridge The practice lasted until 1780 FL 4 This punishment bore the evocative name of cubainhade DN 2 Cycling network Edit The commune is traversed by the Velodyssee Bicycle paths are located along the left bank of the Adour a large part of the left bank of the Nive and along various axes of the city where there are some bicycle lanes The city offers free bicycles on loan 68 Public transport Edit Urban network Edit Most of the lines of the Chronoplus bus network operated by the Transdev agglomeration of Bayonne link Bayonne to other communes in the urban transport perimeter Anglet Biarritz Bidart Boucau Saint Pierre d Irube and Tarnos Note 29 69 The Bayonne free shuttle Bayonne serves the city centre Grand and Petit Bayonne by connecting several parking stations other free shuttles perform other short trips within the commune Interurban networks Edit Bayonne is connected to many cities in the western half of the department such as Saint Jean de Luz and Saint Palais by the Pyrenees Atlantiques long distance coach network of Transport 64 managed by the General Council Since the network restructuring in the summer of 2013 the lines converge on Bayonne 70 Bayonne is also served by services from the Landes departmental network XL R 71 Rail transport Edit The Gare de Bayonne is located in the Saint Esprit district and is an important station on the Bordeaux Irun railway It is also the terminus of lines leading from Toulouse to Bayonne and from Bayonne to Saint Jean Pied de Port It is served by TGV Intercites Intercites de nuit and TER Nouvelle Aquitaine trains to Hendaye Saint Jean Pied de Port Dax Bordeaux Pau and Tarbes Air transport Edit Bayonne is served by the Biarritz Anglet Bayonne Airport IATA code BIQ ICAO code LFBZ located on the communal territories of Anglet and Biarritz Note 30 The airport was returned to service in 1954 after repair of damage from bombing during the Second World War Demographics EditIn 2017 the commune had 51 228 inhabitants Historical populationYearPop p a 179312 578 180013 190 0 68 180614 006 1 01 182113 248 0 37 183114 773 1 10 183615 912 1 50 184117 303 1 69 184618 120 0 93 185118 870 0 81 185626 187 6 77 186125 611 0 44 186626 333 0 56 187227 173 0 52 187627 416 0 22 188126 261 0 86 188627 289 0 77 189127 192 0 07 189626 918 0 20 YearPop p a 190127 601 0 50 190626 488 0 82 191127 886 1 03 192128 215 0 12 192631 436 2 19 193131 727 0 18 193631 350 0 24 194632 620 0 40 195432 575 0 02 196236 941 1 58 196842 743 2 46 197542 938 0 07 198241 381 0 53 199040 051 0 41 199940 078 0 01 200744 498 1 32 201245 855 0 60 201751 228 2 24 Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Source EHESS 72 and INSEE 73 Education EditBayonne commune is attached to the Academy of Bordeaux It has an information and guidance center CIO 74 As of 14 December 2015 Bayonne had 10 kindergartens 22 elementary or primary schools 12 public and 10 private primary schools including two ikastolas 2 public colleges Albert Camus and Marracq colleges 5 private colleges La Salle Saint Bernard Saint Joseph Saint Amand Notre Dame and Largente which meet the criteria of the first cycle of second degree studies For the second cycle Bayonne has 3 public high schools Rene Cassin school general education the Louis de Foix school general technological and vocational education and the Paul Bert vocational school 4 private high schools Saint Louis Villa Pia general education Largente Bernat Etxepare general and technological and Le Guichot vocational school There are also the Maurice Ravel Conservatory of Music Dance and Dramatic Art and the art school of the urban community of Bayonne Anglet Biarritz Culture EditCultural festivities and events Edit nbsp Fetes de Bayonne 2004 King Leon nbsp The Bayonne Bullfighting ringFor 550 years every holy Thursday Friday and Saturday the Foire au Jambon Ham festival is held to mark the beginning of the season 75 Note 31 An annual summer festival has been held in the commune since 1932 for five days Note 32 organized around parades bulls races fireworks and music in the Basque and Gascon tradition These festivals have become the most important festive events in France in terms of attendance Main article Fetes de Bayonne Bayonne has the oldest French bullfighting tradition A bylaw regulating the encierro is dated 1283 cows oxen and bulls are released each year in the streets of Petit Bayonne during the summer festivals The current arena opened in 1893 is the largest in South west France with more than 10 000 seats A dozen bullfights are held each year attracting the biggest names in bullfighting Throughout summer several novilladas also take place The city is a member of the Union of French bullfighting cities Health EditBayonne is the focus of much of the hospital services for the agglomeration of Bayonne and the southern Landes In this area all inhabitants are less than 35 km from a hospital offering medical obstetrical surgical or psychiatric care The hospitals for all the Basque Coast are mainly established in Bayonne the main site of Saint Leon and Cam de Prats and also in Saint Jean de Luz which has several clinics 76 Sports Edit nbsp Bayonne Rowing Boat shedRowing a popular sport for a long time on the Nive and the Adour near Bayonne There are two clubs the Nautical Society of Bayonne SNB established in 1875 and Aviron Bayonnais established in 1904 by former members of the SNB and which later became a sports club Basketball Denek Bat Bayonne Urcuit is a basketball club with a male section competing in NM1 3rd national level of the French league The club is based in the city of Urcuit but plays in the Lauga Sports Palace in Bayonne Football Aviron Bayonnais FC play their home games at Didier Deschamps Stadium in Championnat National 3 the 5th French division since the 2013 2014 season after a year in CFA and three consecutive years in the Championnat National Didier Deschamps started his career at Aviron Bayonnais FC The stadium formerly called the Grand Basque is now named after him There are also three other football clubs in Bayonne the Crusaders of Saint Andrew playing in the higher regional division the Portuguese stars of Bayonne first district division and the Bayonne association on the right bank of the river 3rd district division Omnisports Aviron Bayonnais created in 1904 includes many sports sections and a large number of members Note 33 The pro rugby and football club are the most famous sections of the club The Bayonne Olympic Club created in 1972 is located in the district of Hauts de Sainte Croix The club offers a wide range of sports including pelote gymnastics combat sports and a pool section The club had nearly 400 members in 2007 Basque Pelota Bayonne is an important place for Basque pelota The French Federation of Basque Pelota is headquartered at Trinquet moderne near the Bullring 77 Many titles were won by pelota players from the city The World Championships took place in Bayonne in 1978 in association with Biarritz 78 Rugby appeared in Basque Country at the end of the 19th century with the arrival in 1897 at Bayonne High School of a 20 year old person from Landes who converts his comrades to football rugby which he had discovered in Bordeaux 79 Practicing in the fields near the Spanish Gate they communicated their enthusiasm to other colleges in Bayonne and Biarritz leading to the creation of the Biarritz Sporting Club and Biarritz Stadium which merged in 1913 to become Biarritz Olympique Bayonne has two rugby clubs The Bayonne Athletic Association ASB plays in Federale 3 while the Aviron Bayonnais rugby pro in the 2014 2015 season played in Top 14 where they have played without interruption since the 2004 2005 season Aviron Bayonnais has won three league titles in France 1913 1934 and 1943 It was the first club from a small town to become champion of France Its stadium is the Stade Jean Dauger There is also a women s team in the ASB playing in the National Division 1B This team won the 2014 Armelle Auclair challenge citation needed Religion EditChristian worship Edit Bayonne is in the Diocese of Bayonne Lescar and Oloron with a suffragan bishop since 2002 under the Archdiocese of Bordeaux 80 Monseigneur Marc Aillet has been the bishop of this diocese since 15 October 2008 The diocese is located in Bayonne in the Place Monseigneur Vansteenberghe Besides Bayonne Cathedral in Grand Bayonne Bayonne has Saint Esprit Saint Andrew Rue des Lisses Arenes Avenue of the Czech Legion Saint Etienne and Saint Amand Avenue Marechal Soult churches The Carmel of Bayonne located in the Marracq district has had a community of Carmelite nuns since 1858 The Way of Baztan also ruta del Baztan or camino Baztanes is a way on the pilgrimage of Camino de Santiago which crosses the Pyrenees further west by the lowest pass by the Col de Belate 847 m It is the ancient road used by pilgrims descending to Bayonne then either along the coast on the Way of Soulac or because they landed there from England for example to join the French Way as soon as possible in Pamplona The Way of Bayonne joins the French Way further downstream at Burgos The Protestant church is located at the corner of Rue Albert I st and Rue du Temple 81 A gospel church is located in the Saint Esprit districtit where there is also a church belonging to the Gypsy Evangelical Church of the Protestant Federation of France 82 Jewish worship Edit The synagogue was built in 1837 in the Saint Esprit district north of the town 83 The Jewish community of Bayonne is old it consists of different groups of fugitives from Navarre and Portugal who established at Saint Esprit les Bayonne after the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492 and Portugal in 1496 In 1846 the Central Consistory moved to Saint Esprit which was integrated with Bayonne in 1857 citation needed Economy Edit nbsp Rue Poissonnerie a shopping street in Grand Bayonne nbsp Bayonne ham nbsp Dark Chocolate with Espelette pepper Population and income tax Edit In 2011 the median household income tax was 22 605 placing Bayonne 28 406th place among the 31 886 communes with more than 49 households in metropolitan France 84 In 2011 47 8 of households were not taxable Insee 1 Employment Edit In 2011 the population aged from 15 to 64 years was 29 007 persons of which 70 8 were employable 60 3 in employment and 10 5 unemployed Insee 2 While there were 30 012 jobs in the employment area against 29 220 in 2006 and the number of employed workers residing in the employment area was 17 667 the indicator of job concentration is 169 9 which means that the employment area offers nearly two jobs to for every available worker Insee 3 Businesses and shops Edit Bayonne is the economic capital of the agglomeration of Bayonne and southern Landes The table below details the number of companies located in Bayonne according to their industry Insee 4 Structure of the Economy in Bayonne as at 1 January 2013 No of EstablishmentsTOTAL 4 665Industry 270Construction 375Trade transport and services 3 146Public Administration education health and social services 874Scope Commercial activities excluding Agriculture The table below shows employees by business establishments in terms of numbers Insee 5 Active establishments by sector of activity on 31 December 2011 Total 0 Staff 1 to 9 Staff 10 to 19 Staff 20 to 49 Staff 50 Staff or moreEnsemble 5 946 100 0 3 797 1 708 213 155 73Agriculture sylviculture and fishing 46 0 8 38 6 0 2 0Industry 292 4 9 150 101 23 15 3Construction 428 7 2 299 84 26 15 4Trade transport services 3 953 66 5 2 390 1 346 117 73 27including trade and car repair 1 115 18 8 579 457 38 32 gt 9Public Administration education health social services 1 227 20 6 920 171 47 50 39Scope All activities The following comments apply to the two previous tables Note 34 the bulk of economic activity is provided by companies in the tertiary sector Agriculture is almost non existent Note 54 Note 35 less than 5 of the activity is from the industrial sector which remains focused on establishments of less than 50 employees as also are construction related activities public administration education health and social services are activities of over 20 of establishments confirming the importance of Bayonne as an administrative centre In 2013 549 new establishments were created in Bayonne including 406 Sole proprietorships Insee 6 Insee 7 Workshops and Industry Edit Bayonne has few such industries as indicated in the previous tables There is Plastitube specializing in plastic packaging 190 employees 76 The Izarra liqueur company set up a distillery in 1912 at Quai Amiral Bergeret and has long symbolized the economic wealth of Bayonne Industrial activities are concentrated in the neighbouring communes of Boucau Tarnos Turbomeca Mouguerre and Anglet Bayonne is known for its fine chocolates produced in the town for 500 years and Bayonne ham a cured ham seasoned with peppers from nearby Espelette Izarra the liqueur made in bright green or yellow colours is distilled locally It is said by some that Bayonne is the birthplace of mayonnaise supposedly a corruption of Bayonnaise the French adjective describing the city s people and produce Now bayonnaise can refer to a particular mayonnaise flavoured with the Espelette chillis Bayonne is now the centre of certain craft industries that were once widespread including the manufacture of makilas traditional Basque walking sticks The Fabrique Alza just outside the city is known for its palas bats used in pelota the traditional Basque sport Service activities Edit The active tertiary sector includes some large retail chains such as those detailed by geographer Roger Brunet 76 BUT 240 staff Carrefour 150 staff E Leclerc 150 staff Leroy Merlin 130 staff and Galeries Lafayette 120 employees Banks cleaning companies Onet 170 employees and security Brink s 100 employees are also major employers in the commune as is urban transport which employs nearly 200 staff Five health clinics providing a total of more than 500 beds each employ 120 to 170 staff 76 The port of Bayonne Edit nbsp The cargo ship BBC Magellan in the port of Bayonne in 2014 The port of Bayonne is located at the mouth of the Adour downstream of the city It also occupies part of communes of Anglet and Boucau in Pyrenees Atlantiques and Tarnos in Landes 85 It benefits greatly from the natural gas field of Lacq to which it is connected by pipeline This is the ninth largest French port for trade with an annual traffic of about 4 2 million tonnes of which 2 8 is export It is also the largest French port for export of maize 76 It is the property of the Aquitaine region who manage and control the site 86 Metallurgical products movement are more than one million tons per year and maize exports to Spain vary between 800 000 and 1 million tons The port also receives refined oil products from the TotalEnergies oil refinery at Donges 800 000 tons per year Fertilizers are a traffic of 500 000 tons per year and sulphur from Lacq albeit in sharp decline is 400 000 tons 76 87 The port also receives Ford and General Motors vehicles from Spain and Portugal and wood both tropical and from Landes 76 Tourism services Edit Due to its proximity to the ocean and the foothills of the Pyrenees as well as its historic heritage Bayonne has developed important activities related to tourism Insee 8 On 31 December 2012 there were 15 hotels in the city offering more than 800 rooms to visitors but there were no camp sites Insee 9 The tourist infrastructure in the surrounding urban area of Bayonne complements the local supply with around 5800 rooms spread over nearly 200 hotels and 86 campsites offering over 14 000 beds 88 Sights Edit nbsp The Chateau VieuxThe Nive divides Bayonne into Grand Bayonne and Petit Bayonne with five bridges between the two both quarters still being backed by Vauban s walls The houses lining the Nive are examples of Basque architecture with half timbering and shutters in the national colours of red and green The much wider Adour is to the north The Pont Saint Esprit connects Petit Bayonne with the Quartier Saint Esprit across the Adour where the massive Citadelle and the railway station are located Grand Bayonne is the commercial and civic hub with small pedestrianised streets packed with shops plus the cathedral and Hotel de Ville The Cathedrale Sainte Marie is an imposing elegant Gothic building rising over the houses glimpsed along the narrow streets It was constructed in the 12th and 13th centuries The south tower was completed in the 16th century but the cathedral was only completed in the 19th century with the north tower The cathedral is noted for its charming cloisters There are other details and sculptures of note although much was destroyed in the Revolution Nearby is the Chateau Vieux some of which dates back to the 12th century where the governors of the city were based including the English Black Prince nbsp Sainte Marie CathedralThe Musee Basque is the finest ethnographic museum of the entire Basque Country It opened in 1922 but has been closed for a decade recently for refurbishment It now has special exhibitions on Basque agriculture seafaring and pelota handicrafts and Basque history and way of life The Musee Bonnat began with a large collection bequeathed by the local born painter Leon Bonnat The museum is one of the best galleries in south west France and has paintings by Edgar Degas El Greco Sandro Botticelli and Francisco Goya among others At the back of Petit Bayonne is the Chateau Neuf among the ramparts Now an exhibition space it was started by the newly arrived French in 1460 to control the city The walls nearby have been opened to visitors They are important for plant life now and Bayonne s botanic gardens adjoin the walls on both sides of the Nive The area across the Adour is largely residential and industrial with much demolished to make way for the railway The Saint Esprit church was part of a bigger complex built by Louis XI to care for pilgrims to Santiago de Compostela It is home to a wooden Flight into Egypt sculpture Overlooking the quarter is Vauban s 1680 Citadelle The soldiers of Wellington s army who died besieging the citadelle in 1813 are buried in the nearby English Cemetery visited by Queen Victoria and other British dignitaries when staying in Biarritz The distillery of the famous local liqueur Izarra is located on the northern bank of the Adour and is open to visitors nbsp CitadelNotable people Edit1200s Edit Edmund Crouchback or Edmond Plantagenet Earl of Lancaster born in 1245 at London and died in 1296 at Bayonne was an English prince Second surviving son of King Henry III and Eleanor of Provence he was the 1st Earl of Lancaster and the founder of the House of Lancaster1500s Edit Jean du Vergier de Hauranne 1581 1643 theologian who introduced Jansenism into France1700s Edit Guillaume du Tillot 1711 1774 politician Marguerite Brunet called Mademoiselle Montansier born in 1730 at Bayonne and died in 1820 at Paris was an actress and director of theatre The house where she was born still exists in Rue des Faures at Bayonne Dominique Joseph Garat 1749 1833 writer and politician Francois Cabarrus 1752 1810 French adventurer and Spanish financier Armand Joseph Dubernad 1741 1799 financial trader consul general of the Holy Roman Empire Bertrand Pelletier 1761 1797 chemist and pharmacologist Jacques Laffitte 1767 1844 banker and politician1800s Edit Frederic Bastiat 1801 1850 classical liberal author and political economist Helene Feillet 1812 1889 painter and lithographer images of the Basque Country Charles Lavigerie born at Bayonne in 1825 and died in 1892 at Algiers Algerie was a 19th century Cardinal He was the founder of the Society of Missionaries of Africa which is better known under the name White Fathers Achille Zo 1826 1901 painter Leon Bonnat 1833 1922 painter Ramon Altarriba y Villanueva 1841 1906 Spanish Carlist politician Leandro Ramon Garrido 1868 1909 English Spanish painter born in Bayonne France Rene Cassin 1887 1976 lawyer and judge recipient of the 1968 Nobel Peace Prize Francois Duhourcau 1883 1851 writer and historian1900s Edit Loleh Bellon 1925 1999 actress and playwright Michel Camdessus born 1933 managing director of the International Monetary Fund from 1997 to 2000 Maurice Andre 1933 2012 virtuoso classical trumpet player Didier Deschamps born 1968 World Cup winning footballer manager of the France national team since 2012 Sylvain Luc born 1965 jazz guitarist Anthony Dupuis born 1973 professional tennis player Xavier de le Rue born 1979 a snowboarder Imanol Harinordoquy born 1980 French international rugby union player Eva Bisseni born 1981 judoka Stephane Ruffier born 1986 a France national football team goalkeeper Xavier Ouellet born 1993 ice hockey player for the Laval Rocket Aymeric Laporte born 1994 footballer Raised in the city Jessika Ponchet born 1996 tennis playerIn popular culture EditIn Wyndham Lewis s novel The Wild Body 1927 the protagonist Ker Orr in the first story A Soldier of Humour takes the train from Paris and stays in Bayonne before going to Spain In Ernest Hemingway s novel The Sun Also Rises three of the characters visit Bayonne en route to Pamplona Spain In Kim Stanley Robinson s novel The Years of Rice and Salt 2002 Bayonne is the first city recolonized by the Muslims after the total depopulation of Europe by the Black Death Named Baraka its earliest colonizers were later driven out by rivals from Al Andalus and flee to the Loire Valley where they found the city of Nsara In Trevanian s novel Shibumi Hannah has been called as a whore from Bayonne by elderly Basque women in a village of the Northern Basque Country The seventh track of Joe Bonamassa s album Dust Bowl is entitled The Last Matador of Bayonne In the summer of 2008 Manu Chao s live album Baionarena was recorded in the Arena of Bayonne The album Life is Elsewhere by English band Little Comets features a song titled Bayonne The eighth track of La Nef s album La Traverse Miraculeuse is entitled Le Navire de Bayonne Notes and references EditNotes Edit Achille Luchaire Annals of the Faculty of Letters of Bordeaux 1879 note 12 and 24 regarding the Notitia Provinciarum mentioning the civitas Boatium var Boasium Bohatium Boaccensium Boacium whose identification with Bayonne proposed by Scaliger and Valois is absolutely inadmissible see Desjardins Gaule rom II 874 note 1 in French Neanderthal Stone tools from 80 000 to 45 000 BC corresponding to the Mousterian period the Riss Glaciations and Wurm II Sigillata ceramics of red brick colour the resulting relief decoration is decorated before firing by stamping The Notitia Dignitatum imperii Romani dating from 340 to 420 AD mentions the seat of the tribune of the cohort of Novempopulania in these terms In provincia Novempopulana tribunus cohortis Novempopulanae Lapurdo Gerard Coulon The Gallo Romains life work beliefs diversions 54 BC 486 AD Paris 2006 Errance Hesperides collection ISBN 2 87772 331 3 p 21 in French retains the number 10 hectares According to Eugene Goyheneche in Basque Country Soule Labourd Lower Navarre Societe nouvelle d editions regionales et de diffusion Pau 1979 BnF FRBNF34647711 the old Roman wall which is still visible in parts was in the shape of a polygon of 1 125 metres 3 691 feet perimeter in an area of 6 to 9 hectares 15 22 acres Peter Hourmat History of Bayonne from its origins to the French Revolution of 1789 Society of Sciences Letters Arts of Bayonne 1986 pp 27 to 35 in French deplores the lack of sources for the period 5th century to the 10th century If the existence of a major military site is attested by the remains of the tower walls of a castrum the headquarters or refuge of a cohort in the last days of the Roman Empire in the half a millennium that followed the collapse of the latter plunges us into an almost total ignorance of who occupied the area of the castrum and the identity of the people A heavy silence covers the fate of Lapurdum and documents at our disposal for five centuries can be counted on the fingers of one hand and these lead to different or contradictory interpretations So this story becomes a long series of question marks for example that of Novempopulania The Treaty of Andelot signed in 587 between Guntram king of Burgundy and Brunhilda of Austrasia mentions Lapurdo it documents the return to Brunhilda of several cities including Aire Couserans and Lapurdo each with its territories cum terminibus Manex Goyhenetche indicates that in the 6th century the term civitas was used to designate a fortress The Frankish dynasties of Austrasia and Neustria by the Treaty of Andelot consolidated their grip on part of the former territory of the Nine Peoples In the 4th century Lapurdum continued to exist and by the end of the 6th century returned to its function as a fortress Lapurdum controlled firstly the routes leading to the Pyrenean passes and secondly the cabotage routes of the Frankish fleets from Bordeaux to Asturias The Vicount resided in Chatelet lou Castet next to the entry to the current Cinq Cantons Five Cantons which was the Roman gate leading to the port source Eugene Goyheneche The Basque Country Soule Labourd Lower Navarre New Society regional editions and distribution Pau 1979 Record BNF FRBNF34647711 It can be deduced that it existed prior to that date Relations with Labourd were often difficult and caused many bloody conflicts The most famous of them took place in 1343 when the mayor of Bayonne Pe de Poyane killed five labourdin nobles an episode which according to Eugene Goyheneche had its origin in a fictional story of On the Proudines bridge at Villefranque retold by Augustine Chaho and Hippolyte Taine For example a Bayonnais fleet participated in the Siege of Calais led by the English in 1346 which consisted of 15 vessels and 439 men source Eugene Goyheneche The Basque Country Soule Labourd Lower Navarre Society new regional editions and distribution Pau 1979 Record BNF FRBNF34647711 p 163 in French The siege lasted nine days from 12 to 20 August 1451 according to Pierre Hourmat History of Bayonne origins to the French Revolution of 1789 Society of Arts Science amp Arts of Bayonne 1986 p 143 Two annual fairs one on the first day of Lent and the other 1 August grant them free fairs in perpetuity of all Aydes imposicions impostz and any other subsidies qualxconques which one will be held the first day of karesme and the other on the first day of August as letters patent of Louis XI established at Montferrand in May 1462 Francis I was replaced as a captive by his two eldest sons Francis III Duke of Brittany and Henry II of France who were finally released in 1530 after payment of the ransom The Forges of the Adour were actually located in the commune of Boucau on the right bank of the river This blazon was effective 3 August 1919 by the municipal council of the city of Bayonne quoted by Rene Broca in the preface of the book History of Bayonne from its origins to the French Revolution of 1789 Pierre Hourmat Corporation Sciences Humanities amp Arts Bayonne 1986 The second Gare de Bayonne succeeded an earlier station made of wood and metal built in 1854 at the beginning of the 20th century It was in these terms that the newspaper Le Courrier de Bayonne recounted the event a few days later The Courrier de Bayonne of 8 August 1914 described the departure of the Regiment in the following terms As for the trains which carried our brave little poilus of the 49th they were adorned with flowers On the wagons were pleasant or patriotic inscriptions We noted the following Pleasure Train for Berlin out and back on others Vive la France Long live England Long live Russia were framed by garlands and on the locomotives were the flags of the three countries fraternally chattering in the wind If the Germans saw it perhaps they would not be very sure of victory Source Maurice Sacx Bayonne and the Basque Country Witnesses of history Biarritz Basque Museum of Bayonne 1968 The Avenue of the Czech Legion in Bayonne is in their honour The Polish company was cited in an order of the Army dated 21 June 1918 by General Petain source Francois Lafitte Houssat Bayonne Nive and Adour Joue les Tours Alan Sutton 2001 ISBN 2 84253 557 X The shooting took place at the Saint Leon crossroads near the train station and near the citadel The Chateau Neuf was completed in 1507 by Roger de Gramont In Gascony and in Basque country alluvial floodplains along a river are called barthe from the Gascon barta The successor to the iron railway bridge Raccordement d Aitachouria the Pont Blanc has been used since 2003 to link the Floride Sports Field to the wilderness area on the Ansot plain The Marengo masonry bridge was under Napoleon III The Mayou bridge formerly called Major or Maior was rebuilt in stone in 1857 The A1 A2 B C 4 5 6 7 8 11 14 and N lines as at 9 September 2014 Only a quarter of the area the west end of the runway is located in Biarritz commune In 2014 the Ham Festival was held from 17 to 20 April Bayonne Celebrations traditionally begin on the Wednesday preceding the first weekend of August but the schedule has been changed and the start of celebrations has been advanced in recent years because the crowds become too large They end the following Sunday There are 20 sports sections including the Aviron Bayonnais pro rugby and Aviron Bayonnais FC according to the Aviron Bayonnais FC website Archived 9 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine accessed 29 July 2014 These remarks are not the result of a statistical study of the data presented they are only indicative Part of the commune is part of the town is in the appellation d origine controlee AOC zone of Ossau Iraty but there were no producers in 2014 References Edit Repertoire national des elus les maires data gouv fr Plateforme ouverte des donnees publiques francaises in French 2 December 2020 Populations legales 2020 The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies 29 December 2022 INSEE commune file Comparateur de territoire Commune de Bayonne 64102 Aire d attraction des villes 2020 de Bayonne partie francaise 047 INSEE in French Inhabitants of Pyrenees Atlantiques in French Euskaltzaindia Academy of the Basque language consulted on 5 August 2014 in French Baiona Aunamendi Eusko Entziklopedia in Spanish Hector Iglesias Names of Places and people in Bayonne Anglet and Biarritz in the 18th century Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine editions Elkar Donostia Saint Sebastien 2000 consulted on 25 July 2014 ISBN 2 913156 32 0 p 34 in French Xavier Delamarre Dictionary of the Gallic language A linguistic approach to continental old Celtic editions Errance Paris 2003 ISBN 2 87772 237 6 p 48 in French General Toponymy of France Ernest Negre 28 July 2014 in French General Toponymy of France Ernest Negre 28 July 2014 in French a b Jean Baptiste Orpustan New Basque Toponymy Presses universitaires de Bordeaux 2006 ISBN 2 86781 396 4 p 19 26 in French a b Topographic Dictionary of the Department of Basses Pyrenees Paul Raymond Imprimerie nationale 1863 Digitised from Lyon Public Library 15 June 2011 in French Eugene Goyheneche Goyheneche 1973 Lapurdum p 85 92 in French Bayonne on the 1750 Cassini Map Bayonne on the 1790 Cassini Map Chapter of Bayonne in the Departmental Archives of Pyrenees Atlantiques in French Manuscript from the 14th century in the Departmental Archives of Pyrenees Atlantiques in French Titles published by don Jose Yanguas y Miranda in Diccionario de Antiguedades del reino de Navarra 1840 Pamplona in Spanish Association Lauburu The Cathedral in the heart of the city 1992 in French a b Eugene Goyheneche Bayonne and the Bayonnaise Region from the 12th to the 15th century Thesis by the E N C 1949 in French Pierre Laborde History of Bayonne 1991 in French Charles Athanase Walckenaer Ancient Historical Geography and comparison of the Cisalpine and Transalpine Gauls followed by a geographical analysis of ancient routes and accompanied by a nine map Atlas Vol 1 P Dufart 1839 1085 pages in French In The Week in Basque Country M Esteban March 1996 in French On the presumed origin of the division of the Basque language Hector Iglesias consulted on 5 August 2014 in French Renee Mussot Goulard The Gascons Atlantica 2001 in French Jacques Allieres The Basques Paris Presses universitaires de France March 2003 1st ed 1997 127 p ISBN 213053144X and ISBN 9782130531449 OCLC 77097933 in French Manex Goyhenetche General History of Basque country Prehistory Roman era Middle Ages Vol 1 Elkarlanean Donostia and Bayonne 1998 492 pages ISBN 2 913156 20 7 BnF FRBNF37031711 p 134 in French On 12 April 1215 John King of England granted Bayonne a legal personality that would last throughout the Middle Ages and to some extent until the French Revolution The form of the charter resembled that of La Rochelle According to Eugene Goyheneche the city is governed by the Hundred Peers who were actually a mayor twelve deputies twelve councilors and seventy five peers who were co opted and proposed each year by the mayor for the king s choice The mayor was head of the administrative judiciary and military he had custody of the keys to the city and some mayors were admirals in the bayonnaise fleet The king was represented by a marshal source Eugene Goyheneche The Basque Country Soule Labourd Lower Navarre Societe new regional editions and distribution Pau 1979 Record BNF FRBNF34647711 in French Leon Cadier Seneschal of Lannes under Charles VII royal administration and provincials states A Picard Paris 1885 92 pages consulted 16 June 2014 in French Gascon Registers Vol 1 pp 44 53 141 154 158 159 195 and 233 cited by Manex Goyhenetche General History of Basque Country III Economic and social revolution from the 16th to the 18th century Vol 3 Donostia Bayonne Elkarlanean 2001 411 p ISBN 8483317443 and ISBN 9788483317440 OCLC 466971263 p 42 43 in French Ferdinand Barbe The Epidemics of pestilence in Bayonne in the 16th century Bulletin de la Societe des sciences et lettres de Bayonne 1947 cited by Manex Goyhenetche General History of Basque Country III Economic and social revolution from the 16th to the 18th century Vol 3 Donostia Bayonne Elkarlanean 2001 411 p ISBN 8483317443 and ISBN 9788483317440 OCLC 466971263 p 42 in French Vincent Hiribarren Bayonne at the beginning of the Wars of Religion Revue d histoire de Bayonne du Pays basque et du Bas Adour Vol 159 2004 p 95 122 in French Vincent Hiribarren For God King and the good of the city Bayonne deliberations from 1565 to 1569 Memoir by Maitrise under the direction of Denis Crouzet universite Paris IV Sorbonne June 2003 137 p in French Vincent Hiribarren A lion at the head of a thousand sheep the Sorhaindo family in Bayonne at the end of the 16th century Vol 166 Bulletin of the Basque museum 2005 p 19 34 in French Pierre Hourmat Bulletin SSLAB Collection No 157 The City of Bayonne Library p 257 in French Pierre Hourmat Bulletin SSLAB Collection No 158 The City of Bayonne Library p 158 in French Francois Noel L J M Carpentier Puissant Mr New Dictionary of the origins inventions and discoveries in arts sciences geography agriculture commerce etc Janet et Cotelle 1833 p 143 in French Pierre Hourmat Vauban and the fortifications of Pyrenees Atlantiques Societe des Sciences Lettres amp Arts de Bayonne 1984 p 32 in French Eugene Goyheneche Our Basque Land Societe nouvelle d editions regionales et de diffusion Pau 1979 BnF FRBNF33028848 p 93 in French Des villages de Cassini aux communes d aujourd hui Commune data sheet Saint Esprit EHESS in French a b Paul Robert Magocsi Jean W Sedlar Robert A Kann Charles Jelavich Joseph Rothschild 1974 A History of East Central Europe University of Washington Press p 49 ISBN 978 0 295 95358 8 Retrieved 11 May 2012 In The week in Basque Country T Laxalt February 1996 in French Claude Duhau Mayors and Councilors of Bayonne 1831 2001 1999 p 80 in French Louis Poullenot Lower Pyrenees Occupation Liberation 1940 1945 J amp D Editions Biarritz 1995 p 246 in French Jacques Navarret The Port of Bayonne Congres 1999 p 293 in French In The week in Basque Country J Crouzet August 1994 in French a b c d e Olivier Ribeton A Gramont Museum at Bayonne Publication of the Societe des Sciences Lettres et Arts de Bayonne Bayonne 1986 in French List of Mayors of France in French Decree No 2014 248 of 25 February 2014 concerning the delimitation of cantons in the department of Pyrenees Atlantiques consulted on 9 March 2015 in French List of competent jurisdictions for Bayonne Ministry of Justice website in French Pyrenees Atlantiques Communal database Archived 19 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine consulted on 9 March 2015 in French The Bayonne San Sebastian Eurocity GEIE consulted on 9 March 2015 in French Statutes of the basque Bayonne San Sebastian Eurocity GEIE consulted on 9 March 2015 in French National Commission for Decentralised cooperation Delegation pour l Action Exterieure des Collectivites Territoriales Ministere des Affaires etrangeres in French Retrieved 14 December 2015 Bayonne on Google Maps Geographic Repertoire of communes Archived 8 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine published by the Institut geographique national in French Sandre Fiche cours d eau L Adour Q 0000 The Adour in the Natura 2000 network Archived 14 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine Institution Adour website consulted on 23 August 2014 in French Page FR7200724 Natura 2000 National Inventory of Natural heritage website consulted on 23 August 2014 in French Bayonne on the Geoportail from National Geographic Institute IGN website in French Paris Nice Strasbourg Brest Data from the Station at Biarritz from 1981 to 2010 in French Donnees climatiques de la station de Biarritz in French Meteo France Archived from the original on 20 February 2020 Retrieved 28 December 2015 Climat Aquitaine in French Meteo France Archived from the original on 20 May 2019 Retrieved 28 December 2015 Biarritz Pays Basque 64 PDF Fiche Climatologique Statistiques 1981 2010 et records in French Meteo France Archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2018 Retrieved 6 March 2018 Normes et records 1961 1990 Biarritz Anglet 64 altitude 69m in French Infoclimat Retrieved 28 December 2015 The bicycle in town City of Bayonne Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Bayonne official website consulted on 6 October 2014 in French Chronoplus Network Map Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine consulted on 25 July 2014 in French Network map Archived 26 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Transports 64 consulted on 11 September 2014 in French The RDTL network consulted on 11 September 2014 in French Des villages de Cassini aux communes d aujourd hui Commune data sheet Bayonne EHESS in French Population en historique depuis 1968 INSEE Schools in Bayonne in French The Foire au jambon consulted on 29 July 2014 in French a b c d e f g Roger Brunet personal website consulted on 5 August 2014 in French The headquarters of the French Federation of Basque Pelota retrieved 5 August 2014 in French Photos of the French delegation at the World championships for Basque pelota consulted on 5 August 2014 in French Marie France Chauvirey Life in olden days in Basque country Editions Sud Ouest Lucon 1994 ISBN 2 87901 219 8 p 157 in French The Diocese of Bayonne Lescar and Oloron consulted on 9 March 2015 in French The Temple of Bayonne Reformed Church consulted on 29 July 2014 in French List of Evangelical churches in Pyrenees Atlantiques consulted on 29 July 2014 in French Community of Bayonne consulted on 13 September 2014 in French Page RFDM2011COM Local Fiscal Revenue by household 2011 consulted on 30 July 2014 20mb in French The Port of Bayonne Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine official website consulted on 14 September 2014 in French The port of Bayonne Archived 14 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine official website consulted on 14 September 2014 in French Traffic in the port of Bayonne in 2008 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Port of Bayonne official website consulted on 14 September 2014 in French Key Tourism statistics for the Urban area of Bayonne at 31 December 2012 Archived 14 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine consulted on 14 September 2014 Insee Edit Dossier 2013 relative to the commune REV T1 Taxes on the income of households EMP T1 Population from 15 to 64 years by type of activity EMP T5 Employment and Activity DEN T5 Number of establishments by sector of activity on 1 January 2013 CEN T1 Active establishments by sector of activity on 31 December 2011 DEN T1 Creation of Enterprises by sector of activity in 2011 DEN T2 Creation of individual entreprises by sector of activity in 2011 EMP T8 Employment by sector of activity in French TOU T1 Number and capacity of hotels at 31 December 2012 in French National Database Bibliographic sources Edit Leon H Histoire des Juifs de Bayonne Paris Armand Durlacher 1893 in 4 xvj 436 pp illustre de 4 planches hors texte Pierre Dubourg Noves Bayonne Ouest France 1986 ISBN 2 85882 609 9 in French Noted DN in the text p 27 p 20 Eugene Goyheneche Basque Country Soule Labourd Lower Navarre Societe nouvelle d editions regionales et de diffusion Pau 1979 BnF FRBNF34647711 in French Noted EG in the text p 149 a b c d p 152 p 171 p 160 p 162 p 163 p 187 p 417 p 418 Pierre Hourmat History of Bayonne from its origins to the French Revolution of 1789 Societe des Sciences Lettres amp Arts de Bayonne 1986 in French Noted PH in the text p 159 p 142 p 160 p 164 p 214 p 511 a b c d p 4 a b c p 3 Pierre Hourmat Visiting Bayonne Sud Ouest 1989 in French Noted PiH in the text a b p 3 p 152 p 6 a b p 11 p 18 p 25 p 24 p 30 Bayonne of the Nive and Adour Francois Lafitte Houssat Alan Sutton Joue les Tours 2001 ISBN 2 84253 557 X in French Noted as FL in the text a b p 54 p 55 a b p 118 a b p 25 The Bayonne Official website Noted as M in the text External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bayonne City council website in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bayonne amp oldid 1177996400, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.