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Digne-les-Bains

Digne-les-Bains (French pronunciation: [diɲ le bɛ̃] ; Occitan: Dinha dei Banhs), or simply and historically Digne (Dinha in the classical norm or Digno in the Mistralian norm), is the prefecture of the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region of Southeastern France. As of 2018, the commune had a population of 16,333. Its inhabitants are called Dignois (masculine) and Dignoises (feminine).

Digne-les-Bains
Dinha dei Banhs (Occitan)
A view of Digne-les-Bains
Location of Digne-les-Bains
Digne-les-Bains
Digne-les-Bains
Coordinates: 44°05′36″N 6°14′11″E / 44.0933°N 6.2364°E / 44.0933; 6.2364
CountryFrance
RegionProvence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
DepartmentAlpes-de-Haute-Provence
ArrondissementDigne-les-Bains
CantonDigne-les-Bains-1 and 2
IntercommunalityProvence-Alpes Agglomération
Government
 • Mayor (2021–2026) Patricia Granet-Brunello[1] (DVG)
Area
1
117.07 km2 (45.20 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[2]
17,192
 • Density150/km2 (380/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
04070 /04000
Elevation524–1,731 m (1,719–5,679 ft)
(avg. 608 m or 1,995 ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Geography edit

 
Digne-les-Bains and neighboring municipalities

Site and location edit

Located on the edge of the Prealps of Digne [fr] and on both sides of the river Bléone, which flows southwest through the middle of the commune and crosses the town; it forms part of the commune's northeastern and southwestern borders.

Digne-les-Bains is the capital of the Department of Alpes de Haute-Provence. Placed in the geographical centre of the Department, the commune is home to 17,400 inhabitants, making it one of the smaller prefectures of France by its population. The town centre is at 608 metres (1,995 ft) altitude.[3]

Digne is a sprawling commune in the plain formed around the Bléone Valley, given that the terrain that surrounds it is very rugged. The old town is built on a hill between the Bléone and the torrent of the hot springs, but the town has gradually extended in the three directions of the valleys, especially downstream. Its geographical location is quite remarkable, given that it lies at the edge of the Prealps, on a thrust fault that bears its name. A part of the town is completely enclosed in the Bléone Valley, while the town extends widely, on a gentler relief, downstream. With the annexation of neighbouring towns, especially downstream, the town extends over 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) in length.

Neighbouring communes edit

The communes surrounding Digne-les-Bains are La Robine-sur-Galabre, Le Brusquet, Marcoux, Archail, Tartonne, Clumanc, Chaudon-Norante, Châteauredon, Le Chaffaut-Saint-Jurson, Aiglun, Champtercier and Thoard.

Climate edit

Digne-les-Bains features a mid-latitude humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfa), with strong hot-summer humid continental climate (Dfa) and hot-summer mediterranean climate (Csa) influences. Summers are hot and relatively dry, and winters are mildly cold and relatively wet, with air frosts being regular in the winter months.

Climate data for Digne-les-Bains, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 21.5
(70.7)
22.6
(72.7)
24.4
(75.9)
28
(82)
32.5
(90.5)
36.6
(97.9)
39.5
(103.1)
39.1
(102.4)
34.2
(93.6)
30.5
(86.9)
23.8
(74.8)
20.8
(69.4)
39.5
(103.1)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 9
(48)
10.8
(51.4)
14.6
(58.3)
17.2
(63.0)
21.7
(71.1)
26.1
(79.0)
29.8
(85.6)
29.3
(84.7)
24.4
(75.9)
19
(66)
13
(55)
9.2
(48.6)
18.7
(65.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.3
(39.7)
5.4
(41.7)
8.7
(47.7)
11.3
(52.3)
15.4
(59.7)
19.5
(67.1)
22.7
(72.9)
22.3
(72.1)
18.2
(64.8)
13.6
(56.5)
8.3
(46.9)
4.9
(40.8)
12.9
(55.2)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −0.4
(31.3)
−0.1
(31.8)
2.8
(37.0)
5.4
(41.7)
9.2
(48.6)
12.8
(55.0)
15.5
(59.9)
15.3
(59.5)
11.9
(53.4)
8.2
(46.8)
3.6
(38.5)
0.6
(33.1)
7.1
(44.8)
Record low °C (°F) −13.4
(7.9)
−12.7
(9.1)
−10.2
(13.6)
−3.1
(26.4)
−1.9
(28.6)
3.2
(37.8)
7.3
(45.1)
7
(45)
1.8
(35.2)
−2.9
(26.8)
−7.3
(18.9)
−12.8
(9.0)
−13.4
(7.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 45
(1.8)
37.1
(1.46)
41.7
(1.64)
67.1
(2.64)
63.6
(2.50)
53
(2.1)
34.3
(1.35)
55.8
(2.20)
79.1
(3.11)
84.2
(3.31)
73
(2.9)
61
(2.4)
694.9
(27.36)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 5.3 4.7 5.2 8.1 7.8 6.0 4.1 4.7 5.6 7.9 6.4 6.5 72.4
Mean monthly sunshine hours 170 186.7 231.6 225.2 260.5 302.4 343.4 310.2 247 191.2 159.2 148.1 2,775.4
[citation needed]

Geology and terrain edit

The commune, which is at the heart of the geology, has its specificities related to the ancient town[clarification needed] built upstream of the cluse which the Bléone has worn into the Nappe de Digne to emerge into the tertiary basin of Valensole.[4]

The districts of the town cover the alluvium of the streams which converge upstream of the Cluse. The most eastern suburbs joined a line of limestone hills with flint of the Carixian age, forming russet cliffs oriented to the south-west.[4] The hot springs were captured, since ancient times, to the point where these carixian limestones are cut by the hack of the southernmost valley, descending from Entrages. Their healing powers are linked to their ascent along the gypsiferous Triassic levels of the sole thrust of the Nappe de Digne.[4]

The most visible mountain of the commune is Le Cousson at 1,516 metres (4,974 ft); the Bigué rises to 1,653 metres (5,423 ft).[5]

Many reliefs lie around Digne and are objectives for hikers.

  • The Rocher de Neuf Heures [Rock of Nine o'clock]
  • Three chapels (the Chapel of our Lady of Lourdes, the Chapel of Saint-Vincent, and the Chapel La Croix)
  • The right bank of the Bléone (Park of the Haute-Provence Geological Reserve, along the Caguerenard path, paths to access the top of the slope (over 200 metres (660 ft) above the town) and the crest of Andran - Martignon - La Bigue.
  • Trails to access the Basses Bâties de Cousson, and then Le Cousson
  • The Chapel of Saint Pancrace
  • Barre des Dourbes

IUGS geological heritage site edit

In respect of its 'world famous and outstanding accumulation of fossils from a lower Jurassic marine environment', the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) included the 'Ammonite Slab of Digne-les-Bains' in its assemblage of 100 'geological heritage sites' around the world in a listing published in October 2022. The organisation defines an IUGS Geological Heritage Site as 'a key place with geological elements and/or processes of international scientific relevance, used as a reference, and/or with a substantial contribution to the development of geological sciences through history.'[6]

Hydrography edit

In the Eaux-Chaudes Valley, there is one cold and eight hot springs used for hydrotherapy. Some are radioactive, and contain sulfides, chlorobromides, and arsenic.

The town is also crossed by the Bléone and the Mardaric rivers.

Channels of communication and transport edit

Road network edit

N85 Route nationale 85 [fr]
Towards the Mediterranean Sea Towards Grenoble
Barrême Digne-les-Bains Mallemoisson

Railway network edit

 
The Train des Pignes

The town is served by Chemins de fer de Provence via the Nice–Digne line, a narrow gauge line which operates daily. It is the Train des Pignes, which allows the railway to serve little inhabited places with many stations.

Public transport edit

Bus - Since 1992, Digne has the TUD (Urban Transport Digne), which manages the public transport. Initially with six buses, this service increased its vehicle fleet in 1998 with the acquisition of two buses powered by natural gas.

Currently, six bus routes are available to the people of Digne.[7]

Natural and technological risks edit

None of the 200 communes of the Department is in the zero seismic risk zone. Digne townships are located in zone 1b (low seismicity) of the 1991 deterministic classification, based on the historic earthquakes,[8] and in zone 4 (medium risk) according to the EC8 probabilistic classification 2011.[9] The town of Digne is also exposed to three other natural risks:[9]

  • Forest fire
  • Flooding (in the Bléone Valley) and in those of its tributaries;
  • Land movement: all the western part of the municipality is covered by a medium to strong hazard.[10]

The town of Digne is also exposed to a risk of technological origin, that of transport of dangerous goods, by rail, road and pipeline.[11] With regard to the railway, the Saint-Auban to Digne railway line [fr] is disused and has no traffic; the line from Nice to Digne [fr] is used by passenger transport. Route nationale 85 [fr] and the departmental road [fr] RD 900 (former Route nationale 100 [fr]) can be used for the road transport of dangerous goods.[12] Finally, the pipeline to supply natural gas is an additional risk factor to Digne.[13]

The foreseeable natural risk prevention plan [fr] (PPR) of the town was approved in 2008 for the risks of flooding, movement of land and earthquakes[11] and the DICRIM [fr] has existed since 2009.[14]

The commune has been the subject of several orders of natural disaster: in 1984 for an earthquake, and many times for floods, landslides and mudslides, and landslides due to drought.[9] Also included is a flood disaster prior to the orders: The waters of the Mardaric and Eaux-Chaudes which flooded the town in 1928, and the Bléone in 1973 which partially destroyed the bridge.[15] This destruction was caused by the breakdown of a jam created in the bed of the Bès [fr], causing a wave of flooding.[16] Similarly, several massive landslides have happened in the history of the commune, for example on 24 December 1916, which caused the collapse of part of Courbons, and 2002–2003 at Villard-des-Dourbes.[17] Earthquakes have a long history in Digne. Retaining those macro-seismic events felt higher than level V on the MSK scale (sleepers awake, falling objects), we obtain the following list (the specified intensities are those felt in the town, the intensity may be stronger at epicentre):[18]

  • The earthquake of 31 August 1684, an intensity felt Digne of V.5 and whose epicentre was located at Digne[19]
  • The earthquake of 2 December 1872, an intensity felt V and whose epicentre was located at Digne[20]
  • The earthquake of 20 September 1876, an intensity felt V.5 and whose epicentre was located at Digne[21]
  • The earthquake of 23 February 1887, an intensity felt VII and whose epicentre was located in Bussana Vecchia (Liguria)[22]
  • The earthquake of 27 September 1911, an intensity felt V and whose epicentre was located at Barrême[23]
  • The earthquake of 16 February 1915, an intensity felt V and a half and whose epicentre was located at Digne[24]
  • The earthquake of 19 June 1984, of an intensity felt V and whose epicentre was located in Aiglum[25]

Attached communes edit

Courbons (Corbo, cited in the 13th century but the church is cited as 1180)[26] was attached to Digne in 1862.[27] The Priory of Sainte-Eugénie, ancestor of the parish church, was part of the chapter of Digne.[26] Jews installed here were massacred in 1335. Its fortifications were destroyed by Lesdiguières during the Wars of Religion (1590). It had 80 feus in 1315, 90 in 1471 and 507 inhabitants in 1765.[27]

Les Dourbes [fr] (De Dorbas, cited in 1035)[3] was attached to Digne in 1974, as an associated commune. The village is located on a barrier and a Motte-and-bailey castle was built in the 11th century.[28] It had 48 feus in 1315, 12 in 1471 and 249 inhabitants in 1765, 296 inhabitants in 1851, 62 in 1982.[29]

Gaubert (Galbertum, cited in 1180)[26] was attached to Digne in 1862.[30] The parish church was part of the chapter of Digne, who collected the tithe.[26] The square, defended by the Catholic League and Sautaire, was taken by Lavalette in 1591. It had 63 feus in 1315, 41 in 1471 and 456 inhabitants in 1765.[30]

Les Sieyes, or just Sieyes, for short (Lascieias, cited in the 13th century)[31] was attached to Digne in 1862. There were 10 feus in 1315, 13 in 1471 and 307 inhabitants in 1765.[31] The two priories, Sainte-Madeleine and Saint-Véran, were part of the chapter of Digne which received the tithes.[26]

During the Revolution, these four municipalities each had a patriotic society [fr], all created after the end of 1792.[32]

Toponymy edit

The toponym Dinia is known from the 1st century AD (Ptolemy, Pliny the elder). Various hypotheses have been advanced. According to Papon, the name is formed by the hydronym Din (Gaulish water), with the suffix -ia. According to other scholars, the name is derived from a Roman proper noun, Din(n)ius.[33][34]

The current name of Digne-les-Bains was formalised on 25 June 1988,[35] following the decree of 21 June 1988 published on 24 June of the same year in the Official Journal. Previously, the commune was simply called Digne, still a frequent appellation in the current language.

The Vivaro-Alpine Occitan [ˈdiɲɔ], is written as Dinha in the classical norm [fr]. The Provençal [ˈdiɲɔ], is written as Digno in the Mistralian norm.

History edit

Prehistory and antiquity edit

Digne-les-Bains dates back to the Neolithic era. The presence of three rivers, the Bléone, the Mardaric, and the Eaux-Chaudes, made the place ideal for human settlement. Before the Roman conquest, it was the capital of the Bodiontici (or Brodiontii), whose name is found on the Tropaeum Alpium at La Turbie. The town then became a Roman town named Dinia in the 1st century, and became a frequent commercial stop during the Roman era. Following the Romans, it was known as Digna by 780,[3] and was appreciated for its thermal waters.[citation needed]

There are a few rural settlements near to the town, such as the Hôtelleries de Gaubert, southeast of the town, where the excavated building was occupied from the beginning of the 1st century to the end of the 4th century.[36] In this area, at the foot of Le Cousson, the soil has been cultivated continuously, from antiquity right up to the recent reforestation.[37]

Middle Ages edit

Two separate districts were formed: The town and the city. The town, an ancient site, was surrounded with the castrum of the episcopal chateau built on the Rock. The two neighbourhoods functioned as two independent entities from each other and from their inception. The town remained under the supervision of the provost of the chapter while the city or castrum was of the bishop.[38] The arrival of the Angevins at the head of the County of Provence in 1246 accelerated the recovery process of the comital rights usurped during the previous period by lay or ecclesiastical lords.[39]

The return of the comtal power in the city led to a change in the relationship between local authorities and community: In 1260, the city of Digne was given the right to appoint cominaux responsible for ensuring the management of the city.[40] The consolidation of the two sites was done administratively in 1385 by institutional trustees, replacing the cominaux, responsible for representing both the city and the village. The institution evolved with administrative rationalisation at the beginning of the 15th century.[40]

From 1475, preaching by Franciscans caused several murderous anti-Jewish riots.[41]

Early Modern era edit

Like the rest of France, Digne was taken in the Wars of Religion. In 1562, the Huguenots broke into the cathedral, shredded the tables and smashed statues, removed relics and ornaments and burnt them with the choir on the forecourt.[42] The town was attacked by Protestants in 1574.[43] In 1575, it was the Church of Saint-Jérôme which was sacked.[42] In the following years, the city remained under pressure. In 1579, the captain of Archal occupied the surrounding countryside.[44]

In 1589, with the advent of Henry IV, the ultra-Catholics in the Catholic League controlled the town, until 1591. The same year, the town fell before the Royal armies of Lesdiguières. The cathedral, guarded by the defenders, was attacked, bombarded with catapults and then stormed.[45] It is also during this period that the inhabitants seized the château of the bishops, on Le Rochas, destroying it to prevent it from falling into the hands of one party or another.[45]

French Revolution and the First Empire edit

The news of the storming of the Bastille was welcomed, this event announced the end of royal arbitrariness and, perhaps, more profound changes in the organization of the France. Immediately after the arrival of the new, a great phenomenon of collective fear seized France, the fear of an aristocratic conspiracy wishing to recover their privileges. Rumors of troops in arms, devastating everything in their path, propagated at high speed, causing shots of weapons, the organization of militias and anti-aristocratic violence. This great fear, arrived in Seyne on 31 July and belonging to the current "fear of the Mâconnais", reached Digne and its region on 31 July 1789 the day before spreading to Riez, where it arrived during the day, and Moustiers and Castellane.[46]

The city was established as the capital of the Basses-Alpes district [fr] from March 1790, to the creation of the departments. The patriotic society [fr] of Digne was founded in September 1790 (the second Department by seniority); it was affiliated with the Jacobins in June 1791, and became a relay of the club in the Department, accepting the affiliations of many clubs in the Basses-Alpes.[32] It also received the request of affiliation of Carpentras.[47] First called Bourgeois Alcove, it then took the name of Patriotic Club, then on 9 October 1792, Société des amis de la Constitution, de la Liberté, de l’Égalité [Society of friends of the Constitution, of freedom, of equality]. It established a committee of correspondence responsible for relations with other societies affiliated on 14 November 1792.[48] On 10 and 11 January 1793, General Peyron [fr] performed a descent from Marseilles, supported by the Marseille club-goers with weapons. He took revenge because he was unable to obtain the post of attorney general trustee,[49] two departmental administrators were removed[50] and a fine of 13,000 livres paid to the Marseille club.

In 1792–1793, the section of Digne was controlled by the federalists [fr]. In connection with the section of Marseille, it disseminated the ideas of the Girondists, until their proscription on 31 May 1793 and the crushing of the federalist insurrection in July, which resulted in a sentence to death in Digne.[51]

On 5 frimaire year III, the Représentant en mission Gauthier [fr] purified the society.[52]

Digne welcomed the prefecture under the Consulate. The prefect Lameth (1802-1805), created a shaded promenade between Pré de Foire and the banks of the Bléone and planted plane trees on the boulevard Gassendi.[53]

In early March 1815 Napoleon Bonaparte passed through Digne-les-Bains on his way from imprisonment on the island of Elba, gathering support as he moved north. This was early in his Hundred Days which ended with his defeat at the Battle of Waterloo.

Contemporary era edit

In 1851, the announcement of the coup d'état of 2 December caused uplift in rural areas, and peasants installed a provisional government in Digne.[3]

As many municipalities of the Department Digne acquired schools well before the Jules Ferry laws.[54] However, no instruction was given to girls in 1861, only the Falloux Laws (1851) required the opening of a girls school in the communes with more than 800 inhabitants[55] (and that Courbons and Gaubert, small neighbouring rural communes, have a girls school). It was only in the 1860s that the town of Digne chose to open a school for girls (plus the Gaubert and Courbons schools for girls).[56] It was with the Ferry laws that all girls of Digne and the attached villages were regularly educated.

In 1862, Digne absorbed the neighbouring areas of Courbons, Gaubert and Les Sieyes.[35] These connected communes also had their schools, each a school for boys,[54] with Courbons and Gaubert furthermore possessing a school for girls.[55] The commune of Dourbes had two schools for boys (at Dourbes and at Villard),[54] and none for girls.[55]

210 people of Digne died for France during World War I. The hospital took care of the soldiers injured in the fighting, including nearly seventy who died of their injuries, and are buried in the military cemetery of the village square. This square also includes the bodies of two soldiers who died during the Second World War.

WWII edit

The first resistance fighters were a group organized around Simone Pellissier who distributed the journal Combat, from 1941.[57] On 1 May 1942, she laid a wreath at the war memorial, during a demonstration; she was arrested the next day[57] with six other protesters.[58]

Digne was occupied by Italy, then by the German army, following the invasion of the free zone, after the landing of the Allies in North Africa on 8 November 1942. Thirty-four Jews were arrested in Digne before being deported.[59]

With the dissolution of the Armée de Vichy [fr], Commandant Chaumont of the 20th bataillon de chasseurs alpins [fr] began to structure the local Organisation de résistance de l'armée (ORA).[57]

Liberation edit

On 16 August 1944, the city was bombed by P-47 Thunderbolts, which took off from field close to Bastia in Corsica. Their goal was the great bridge of Digne, crossing the Bléone, but only a single bomb reached the bridge, impeding the passage of vehicles for only a few hours. Several buildings were damaged.[60] The bombing killed twenty-four civilians and two Germans[60] (25 in total according to Jean Garcin).[61] The city was liberated on 19 August 1944[61] by Taskforce Butler, a motorized detachment of armoured elements, infantry and artillery from the 36th U.S. "Texas" infantry division and the 45th U.S. infantry division, assisted by the forces of the Resistance.

The release of Digne was part of a movement of circumvention of the Rhône Valley, across the Alps, by the Route Napoléon, entrusted to Taskforce Butler and which aimed to cut the retreat of the German army stationed in Provence. In Aspres-sur-Buëch, the column moved westward, in the direction of the Rhône and Crest (Battle of Montelimar). The fighting was in the day, with six killed and eleven wounded on the Allied side and at least 21 killed on the German side.[62] German soldiers who fell during the fighting for the liberation of Digne were buried in the German military square of the cemetery of the village, with the other soldiers killed during the occupation, during various battles against the forces of Resistance. In March 1958, their bodies were exhumed and transferred to the German military cemetery of Dagneux in Ain.

Immediately after the Liberation, the cleanup began. Executions after trials (with a judge, but without lawyers) took place.[63]

The German prisoner of war camp had up to 2,700 prisoners.[64] One of them participated in the rescue expedition after the double air disaster of the Montagne du Cheval Blanc [fr] in 1948.[65]

The end of the war edit

From the beginning of 1945, new convoys of troops moved through the town, in the direction of the pockets of German resistance around the Ubaye.

From 1945 to the early 21st century edit

In 1974, the neighboring village of Dourbes was attached to Digne.[35] The municipality changed its name to Digne-les-Bains in 1988.[35] Nowadays, the town of Digne-les-Bains continues to expand, mainly along the banks of the Bléone. It forms, with Entrages, Marcoux, La Robine-sur-Galabre, and Mezel, the Communauté de communes des Trois-Vallées [fr] (CC3V). The areas of Le Pigeonnier and Barbejas have been classified as Sensitive urban zones.

On 24 March 2015 Germanwings Flight 9525, carrying 150 people (including six crewmembers), had a rapid descent from cruising altitude approximately 45 minutes after takeoff. It crashed a few miles from the city, en route to Düsseldorf from Barcelona.[66]

Politics and administration edit

List of mayors edit

 
Digne-les-Bains Town Hall, former Desmichel barracks
List of mayors since the Liberation
Term start Term end Name Affiliation Other details
1944 1946 Joseph Fontaine Resistance President of the Comité départemental de libération,
President of the délégation spéciale,[67]
Arises and is elected under the Resistance label in May 1945[68]
1946 1947 Paul Jouve SFIO General councillor,
Senator
1947 1971 Julien Romieu PR Medical doctor,
General councillor
1971 1977 René Villeneuve
March 1977 June 1995 Pierre Rinaldi RPR Member of the National Assembly (1993),
President of the General Council (1992–1998)
June 1995 March 2001 Jean-Louis Bianco PS Secretary-General of the Élysée (1982–1991),
Cabinet member (1991–1993),
Regional councillor (1992–1998),
Member of the National Assembly (1997–2012),
President of the General Council (1998–2012),
Deputy Mayor (2001–2002)
March 2001 April 2014 Serge Gloaguen PS then DVG (PS/DVG)[69] Regional councillor (2004–2010),
President of the CC Asse Bléone Verdon (2013–2014)
April 2014 In office Patricia Granet-Brunello[70][71] DVG (PS/DVG) Hospital doctor,
Departmental councillor (2015–2021),
President of the CC Asse Bléone Verdon (2014–2016),
President of the CA Provence-Alpes (2017–present)
After the Conseil d'État nullified the results of the 2020 municipal election in Digne-les-Bains, the prefect of Alpes-de-Haute-Provence appointed a délégation spéciale presided by Hervé Belmont (22 October – 17 December 2021).[72] Patricia Granet-Brunello then returned to the mayorship.

Cantons edit

 
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence prefecture building in Digne-les-Bains

Digne-les-Bains is divided into two cantons:[73]

Departemental councillors Affiliation Canton Cantonal code Population (2012)
René Massette PS Digne-les-Bains-1 04 04 11,965 (incl. 10,189 within the commune)
Geneviève Primiterra
Pierre Catillon LR Digne-les-Bains-2 04 05 12,398 (incl. 6,655 within the commune)
Sandra Raponi

Intercommunality edit

Digne is part of the following communities:

  • From 2002 to 2013, of the Community of communes of les Trois Vallées [fr], (of which it was the seat)
  • From 2013 to 2017, of the Communauté de communes Asse Bléone Verdon [fr] (of which it was the seat)
  • Since 1 January 2017, of the Communauté d'agglomération Provence-Alpes (of which it is the seat)

Environmental policy edit

Digne-les-Bains is ranked three flowers in the Contest of Flowery Towns and Villages. The city was rewarded with the three flowers in 2007's Contest of Flowery Towns and Villages.[74]

International relations edit

Digne is twinned with:

Population and society edit

Demography edit

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1968 14,722—    
1975 15,416+0.66%
1982 15,149−0.25%
1990 16,087+0.75%
1999 16,064−0.02%
2007 17,455+1.04%
2012 16,844−0.71%
2017 16,460−0.46%
Source: INSEE[76]

In 2006, the commune launched a housing construction project aiming to increase the population beyond 20,000 inhabitants (the lower threshold for obtaining certain public aid).

Area and population edit

The town of Digne-les-Bains has an area of 117.07 square kilometres (45.20 sq mi) and a population of 17,268 inhabitants, ranked as follows:[77]

Rank Population Area Density
France 553rd 147th 5,414th
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 43rd 19th 220th
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence 2nd 8th 6th
Arrondissement of Digne-les-Bains 1st 3rd 2nd

Education edit

Seat of the prefecture, and the inspection académique [fr] of Provence, the city of Digne also has the main educational establishments of the Department:

  • Fourteen schools, 11 primary schools, a private primary school (under contract and whose teachers are employees of National Education), and two nursery schools[78]
  • The Maria-Borrely and Pierre-Gassendi collèges [fr][79]
  • Three lycées, including the Lycée professionnel Beau-de-Rochas,[80] the Pierre-Gilles-de-Gennes [fr] and the multipurpose Alexandra-David-Neel [fr] school,[81] which offers also two BTS certificates and further training of local initiative
  • A University Institute of Technology, which provides lessons in agronomy, DUT engineering of the environment, DUT administrative and commercial management, DUT quality industrial logistics and organization, business tourism, geomatics professional license[82]
  • A Graduate School of Teaching and Education [fr] (ESPE)

Sports edit

Digne was elected as the Sportiest town in France [fr] among towns with less than 20,000 inhabitants in 2006, by the daily newspaper L'Équipe.

The town has several sports facilities, with free access or reserved for the many sporting clubs and schools. These include gyms, a stadium, an equestrian centre, a golf course, and a public swimming pool. It is one of the rare French towns to provide free access to tennis courts.

At the request of the Junior Town Council, a skatepark has been renovated which is open access.

Health edit

The town's hospitals have 480 beds.[5]

Garrison city edit

The following units have held garrison in Digne:

  • 22nd light infantry regiment [fr] (one battalion in the middle of the 19th century);
  • 3rd infantry regiment [fr]

Currently, several gendarmerie units are based in Digne. In addition to the capital of community brigade,[83] there is a motorised brigade, a platoon of monitoring and intervention [fr] (PSIG) and a squadron of Mobile Gendarmerie.[84]

Religion edit

For Catholic worship, the city is the seat of the departmental bishopric, and therefore the Diocese of Digne, Riez and Sisteron. The bishop is Monsignor Jean-Philippe Nault [fr]. He was appointed in 2014 and is the youngest Bishop of France (born in 1965).[citation needed] The Catholic faithful have two places of worship for Mass: Notre-Dame-du-Bourg [fr] and Saint-Jérôme. The members of the Muslim faith also have their place of worship,[85] as well as Protestants[86] and Evangelicals.[87]

Cardinal Jean-Pierre Ricard retired here in 2019 from Bordeaux. He later admitted to "behav[ing] in a reprehensible way with a young girl aged 14" while at Marseilles some 35 years previously, as confirmed on 7 November 2022 by Archbishop Éric de Moulins-Beaufort, the president of the Bishops' Conference of France.[88]

Economy edit

Revenues of the population and taxation edit

The taxation of households and businesses to Digne les Bains in 2010[89]
Tax Communal Intercomunal Departmental Regional
Housing Tax [fr] (TH) 21.60% 0.00% 5.53% 0.00%
Land tax on the built-up properties (TFPB) 44.68% 0.00% 14.49% 2.36%
Land tax on the non built-up properties (TFPNB) 81.75% 0.00% 47.16% 8.85%
Business tax [fr] (TP) 0.00%* 37.01% 0.00% 0.00%

Employment edit

In 2017, the active population amounted to 6,422 persons, including 939 unemployed.[90] These workers are mostly employed (86%) and are employed in the town (83%).[90]

Agriculture edit

At the end of 2015, the primary sector (agriculture, forestry, fishing) had 27 active institutions within the meaning of INSEE (including non-professional operators) and 144 salaried jobs.[90]

The number of professional farms, according to the Agreste survey of the Ministry of Agriculture, is 37 in 2010. It was 44 in 2000,[91] and 106 in 1988.[92] Currently, these operators are essentially turned to breeding sheep and cattle.[91] From 1988 to 2000, the useful agricultural land (SAU) strongly increased, from 1,002 hectares (2,480 acres) to 2,902 hectares (7,170 acres).[92] The SAU has increased slightly during the last decade, to 2,989 hectares (7,390 acres).[91]

The agricultural activity of the surrounding communes allows the existence of Alp'Agri, an agricultural dealer with 30 employees.[93]

The vine was cultivated for wine into the 1950s, which led to local consumption in Digne. This cultivation has declined, to occupy no more than a few hectares in 2005.[94]

The olive groves of the municipality can claim the Huile d'olive de Provence AOC [fr] [Olive Oil of Provence AOC] appellation.

Companies and shops edit

Industry edit

At the end of 2015, the secondary sector (industry and construction) had 213 institutions, using 348 employees, with no establishment exceeding 50 employees.[90]

Shops edit

Two Provençal markets [fr] are held each week, the markets are held on Wednesday[95] and Saturday.[96]

Service sector edit

At the end of 2015, the tertiary sector (commerce, services) had 1,096 establishments (with 2,777 salaried jobs), in addition to 420 institutions in the administrative sector (together with the health and social sector and education), employing 5,465 people.[90]

Digne-les-Bains is the seat of the Chambre de commerce et d'industrie des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence. It manages the Sisteron-Thèze aerodrome and the J. Gage centre.

Chemins de Fer de Provence employs about 50 people in Digne.[5]

SAMSE, a dealer in building materials, employs 73 people.[97] Still in the area of trade, supermarkets are also important employers. Carrefour employs 250 people and Intermarché has 55 employees.[5]

Orange employs approximately 300 employees.[5] Among computer service companies, Xsalto, offering web hosting, development, and installation, employs 22 staff.[98]

The banking sector provides also some employers. The Groupe Caisse d'Épargne has 50 employees, and the Bank of France has 30 employees.[5] Finally, the Renault dealership is another large private employer, with 28 employees.[99]

Tourism edit

Economic overview edit

According to the departmental observatory of tourism, the tourist function is secondary for the municipality, with less than one tourist greeted per capita.[100] However, it offers substantial accommodation capacity, mainly merchant.[101] Several accommodation facilities for tourism exist in the commune:

  • There were 9 hotels in January 2020, of which 4 with two stars, 3 with three stars, and 2 unclassified. The total hotel capacity was 240 rooms.[90]
  • There are a two-star and a three-star campsite in the commune, with a total capacity of 251 pitches.[90]
  • Furnished or unfurnished apartments provide a capacity of hundreds of places.[102][103]
  • Bed and breakfast.[104]
  • Collective accommodation is also present with, among other things, lodges.[105]

Finally, second homes provide a valuable complement to the capacity.[106] 678 in number, these represent 6.5% of homes.[90]

Thermal baths edit

The spa treats respiratory diseases and rheumatism. They use a hot spring at 50 °C and 110,000 overnight stays are made through this activity. The station is given financial autonomy to hire 76 employees in the high season (September–October).[5] The establishment has a Zen Space and Fitness offering massages of the face and the body, and swimming in thermal water at 33 °C.[107]

Local culture and heritage edit

Places and monuments edit

 
Detail of the Dalle à ammonites

The Dalle à ammonites, a classified site, is a rocky layer dating back 200 million years, where one can find more than 1,500 fossils of ammonites containing some which reach a diameter of 70 centimetres (28 in).

Religious architecture edit

The commune maintains a southern aspect and has remarkable heritage items including two cathedrals, an archaeological crypt under the Cathedral of Notre-Dame-du-Bourg [Our Lady of the City], the chapels (Saint Pancrace, Our Lady of Lourdes, etc.)

The Cathedral Notre-Dame-du-Bourg [fr], an historical monument,[108] is a Romanesque cathedral whose foundations date back to the 9th century. Victim of numerous attacks and looting, it was renovated at the beginning of the 13th century. Parts from the 11th and 12th centuries still exist. Its white marble altar is of the Merovingian era.

An archaeological crypt in the basement of the cathedral aids in the discovery of the history of Digne-les-Bains. In the crypt is the exact location of the origins of the city, attested by the presence of ancient walls from the 1st century AD. This corresponds to an urban space and implementation of three buildings of Christianity from the 5th century to the 11th century.[109]

The Saint-Jérôme Cathedral, also an historical monument,[110] is a Gothic cathedral from the 15th and 16th centuries. The facade is from the 19th century.

  Media related to Notre-Dame-du-Bourg at Wikimedia Commons
  Media related to Saint-Jérôme at Wikimedia Commons

The Notre-Dame-de-Lourdes Church was built in 1870 on the Mountain of the Cross, north of Digne, though at the bottom of the slope. The brick walls are its main feature, with its large size.[111]

The chapel of Saint-Vincent belonged to an abbey or priory. It is still in good condition.[111] The Chapel of the Cross, located nearby, is gradually becoming a ruin.[111]

There are numerous churches in the connected communes.

In Courbons, the parish church is Notre-Dame-des-Anges (13th-14th century).[27] It was dedicated to St. Clair in the 17th century.[26] Its single nave consists of three arched barrel bays, and emerges into a square choir.[112] There is also a chapel of Saint-Pierre, south of the village, an establishment which may be very old.[26]

The Church of Dourbes is under the name of Saint-Genest, and the oldest parts are from the 12th and 13th centuries.[26][29] In Villard, the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Chapel probably dates from the 17th century.[26]

In Gaubert, the parish church of Saint-Étienne was built in Romanesque style at the end of the 16th and 17th century.[30] Grand-Saint-Martin farm incorporates some remains of a medieval priory.[26] The chapel of St. Sebastian is situated on the ridge east of the village.[26]

In Sieyès, the Church of Sainte-Marie-Madeleine[26][31] remains along with the Church of Saint-Véran, between the stadium and the cemetery.[26] A more recent chapel was built next to the town hall and school.

There are also two chapels on the mountain which overlooks the ravine of Eaux-Chaudes to the north, Saint-Pons which is in ruins, and the Chapel of Saint-Pancrace. The latter dates from the 17th century and is being restored. It has the distinction of having its bells suspended in a flat metal campanile. The pilgrimage of 12 May, when the priest blessed the sources, remained into the 1950s, and has recently resumed.[113]

Civil and military architecture edit

  • The remains of fortifications can be recognised if one pays attention to the plan of the old town around the central district, built on the heights. Some of the walls and some towers which surrounded the city from the 14th century can still be seen. These remains of ramparts are currently based in the landscape of the dwellings.
  • Hotel Thoron de la Robine from the 17th century[114]
  • The fountain [fr] from 1829, which is an historical monument[115]
  • The sculptures. From 1983 to 1991, an annual international event of sculpture revealed international talent. Award-winning works, in Carrara marble, adorn roundabouts, squares and public gardens.

Culture edit

 
Museum of the Haute-Provence Geological Reserve in Digne
  • The Museum of the Haute-Provence Geological Reserve [fr] and its butterfly garden.
  • The Gassendi Museum [fr] is a modern museum enabling the public to move from art to science, and from the old to the contemporary, across a route in time. Its archaeology section was founded in 1889.[116][117]
  • is an informal art of nature Research Center.[118]
  • The Museum of the Second World War contains documents and period objects evoking the strategic role of Digne in alpine defense and the damage suffered.
  • Intercommunal library of the Trois Vallées
  • The Museum of Alexandra David-Néel, located in her house [fr][119]
  • The Botanic Garde of Les Cordeliers

Cultural references edit

  • Digne is a setting for much of the first section of Victor Hugo's 1862 novel Les Misérables, where it is the home of Bishop Myriel. In early English editions, the town's name was rendered D----. The town is left unnamed in most stage and film adaptations.
  • The asteroid 10088 Digne was named after the town by its discoverer, Belgian astronomer Eric Walter Elst.

Traditional celebrations edit

Digne celebrates lavender, a symbol of the region, in the first weekend of August, at the Corso of lavender. A funfair is installed for the occasion, and a fireworks display is organized. A parade of floats is held, including a procession consisting of a dozen floats in lavender and crepon, led by 500 musicians and dancers from various nations. The Corso draws 10–15,000 people to the town each day.

Arts festivals edit

In May, every year since 2002, the city has organized a festival of urban culture and music. Initiated by the Ligue de l’Enseignement des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence [League of education of Alpes-de-Haute-Provence] and the L'ADSEA. The festival is now organized by the École du sous Sol [School of the Underground] association.

The objective of this festival is to make urban culture (graffiti, slam, street basketball, hip-hop dance, skateboarding) known to a wider public along with contemporary music (rap, rock, pop, electro) through various artistic and cultural events under the program. A sports tournament closes the event. The Hip Hop dance battle and the basketball tournament are open to girls (two girls and two boys by team for the 4 vs 4 battle and at least one girl by team for the 3 vs 3 basketball tournament). An open stage is offered to amateur and semi-professional teams.

Every spring, each year, the René-Char cultural centre receives cinema personalities and projects art and test films at the Festival les Rencontres cinématographiques de Digne. Its president is Jean-Pierre Castagna.

Sports competitions edit

Each year since 2004, the Raid des Terres Noires [fr] [Raid of the Black Lands] mountain biking event brings together more than a thousand participants.

From 2013, the VTT Rando 04 club organizes the Enduro of the Black Lands, Enduro event.

Created in 1999 by The Athletic Club of Digne, the Half-marathon of the Ammonites connects the village of Barles with the prefecture at the beginning of September, each year until 2002. Its rolling course, measured at 21.1 kilometres (13.1 mi) according to the protocols of the French Athletics Federation, goes through the most spectacular sites of the Haute-Provence Geological Reserve [fr], some of which are world-renowned. Examples of these include the clues of Barles and Péouré, the Vélodrome d’Esclangon [Velodrome of Escanglon], Voile de Facibelle [Veil of Facibelle], the Demoiselles coiffées, the Ichthyosaur, and the Dalle à ammonites.

It has been awarded two borders by the guide Le Bipède [The Biped].[citation needed] It welcomed more than 1,550 runners in 4 editions.[citation needed] This sporting event had its a 5th edition in 2013 on the 100th anniversary of the Barles road and in favour of the National League Against Cancer [fr], in memory of Cyril Gues, the first winner of this competition, who died in 2012.

Initiated in 2005 by the Athletic Club of Digne (one edition), the Trail of Cousson was resumed in 2008 by the Athletics Association.[120] The race walking event offers numerous courses in the heart of the Haute-Provence geological Reserve through robines [fr] (the famous "muck"), pre-Alpine forests, villages and ascents of the bar of the Dourbes and Cousson [fr]. Free racing and animations for children as well as heritage walks are also organized parallel to sports competitions. The event also fits into an exemplary sustainable development policy which gives it national recognition.

Heraldry edit

 
Arms of Digne-les-Bains
The arms of Digne-les-Bains are: "Azure to a fleur-de-lis of Or accompanied at head by a cross of gules, at flanks with two "L" letters capitalised faced Argent and in point of a letter "D" capitalised also of Or"[121]



These arms are not attested before the 17th century and the above composition is only one variant among many others existing. The "L" can be gold and can be replaced by silver lions. There are also versions without the golden "L" or lion: "azure to a fleur de lis of gold, accompanied at head by a cross of silver with a letter "D" of the same at the point". The latest version is "azure to a cross of gold at head and a "D" of the same at head". The cross is an evocation of the episcopal see, and the "L", perhaps, is a souvenir of a concession of Louis II of Anjou, from the beginning of the 15th century.[122]

Gabriel Gillybœuf proposed in the early 1980s to replace the capitalised "D" with a fountain expressed in heraldic terms by "a bezant fess, wavy silver and azure" (while maintaining the cross, fleur-de-lis, and capitalised "L" respectively).[122]

The city was jointly owned by the Counts of Provence and the Bishops of Digne. Hence the arms: The cross symbolises the bishopric, the fleur-de-lis as Charles of Anjou,[clarification needed] Count of Provence. The letter "D" is the letter of the city. The letters "L" have been added under Louis XIV, King of France, Count of Provence and Forcalquier.[121]

Notable people edit

 
Statue of Pierre Gassendi in the square of the Cathedral of St. Jerome of Digne
 
Plaque in honor of Bishop Bienvenu de Miollis

Public servants and religion edit

The Arts edit

 
Alexandra David-Néel in Tibet in 1933
  • Paul Martin [fr], (1830-1903), watercolour painter[126]
  • Melchior Jaubert [fr], (1848-1913), painter and watercolourist.
  • Henri Jaubert [fr], (1860-1936), brother of the preceding, painter and watercolourist.
  • Alexandra David-Néel (1868-1969), a Belgian–French writer, spiritualist, Buddhist, anarchist and opera singer, lived in Digne from 1928.
  • Raphaël-Désiré Freida (1877-1942) painter, illustrator, engraver
  • Louis Botinelly (1883–1962), a French sculptor.
  • Paul-Alexandre Arnoux [fr] (1884-1973), French poet.
  • Jean Daviot (born 1962) a French contemporary artist
  • Tristan Louis, (born 1971) American author, entrepreneur and internet activist.
  • Greg Théveniau [fr] (born 1973) musician.
  • Cyril Féraud (born 1985), journalist and television presenter

Science edit

Sport edit

See also edit

References edit

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  85. ^ [Mosque of Digne-les-Bains] (in French). Archived from the original on 9 February 2015. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  86. ^ [Chapel of Digne] (in French). Archived from the original on 9 February 2015. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  87. ^ "Assemblée de Dieu Eglise Evangélique" [Assembly of God Evangelical Church] (in French). Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  88. ^ a b Cardinal Jean-Pierre Ricard admits to abusing 14-year-old girl, withdraws from religious duties, ABC News Online, 2022-11-08
  89. ^ "Impots locaux à Digne les Bains" [Local taxes in Digne les Bains] (in French). taxes.com. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  90. ^ a b c d e f g h Dossier complet: Commune de Digne-les-Bains (04070), INSEE, accessed 17 August 2020 (in French)
  91. ^ a b c Ministère de l'Agriculture, « Orientation technico-économique de l’exploitation », Recensements agricoles 2010 et 2000. link 6 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  92. ^ a b "Exploitations agricoles en 1988 et 2000". INSEE.
  93. ^ "SA ALP'AGRI". Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  94. ^ Réparaz, André de (2007). "Terroirs perdus, terroirs constants, terroirs conquis : vigne et olivier en Haute-Provence XIXe-XXIe siècles". Méditerranée (109): 56 and 59. doi:10.4000/mediterranee.70. Méditerranée, 109. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  95. ^ "Marché du mercredi de Digne-les-Bains" [Wednesday market in Digne-les-Bains] (in French). Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  96. ^ "Marche du samedi de Digne-les-Bains" [Saturday market in Digne-les-Bains] (in French). Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  97. ^ "SAMSE". Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  98. ^ "XSALTO". Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  99. ^ "ESPACE AUTOMOBILES DIGNOIS". Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  100. ^ Anonymous (2007), p. 6
  101. ^ Anonymous (2007), p. 7
  102. ^ Anonymous (2007), p. 32
  103. ^ Anonymous (2007), p. 36
  104. ^ Anonymous (2007), p. 38
  105. ^ Anonymous (2007), p. 30
  106. ^ Anonymous (2007), p. 44
  107. ^ "Thermes Digne-les-Bains". Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  108. ^ Base Mérimée: PA00080379, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  109. ^ "Crypte archéologique". Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  110. ^ Base Mérimée: PA00080378, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  111. ^ a b c Panarotto (2007), p. 147
  112. ^ Jean-Christophe Labadie, Des Anges, Musée départemental d’art religieux, catalogue de l’exposition à la cathédrale Saint-Jérôme (5 juillet-30 septembre 2013), 2013, (ISBN 978-2-86004014-3), p. 29.
  113. ^ Panarotto (2007), p. 146
  114. ^ Base Mérimée: Hôtel Thoron de la Robine, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  115. ^ Base Mérimée: Fontaine monumentale, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  116. ^ "Official site". Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  117. ^ Géraldine Bérard, Carte archéologique des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, Paris, 1997, p. 58.
  118. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 June 2009.
  119. ^ Office de tourisme [Office of tourism]
  120. ^ "Trail du Cousson - Digne les Bains - 2008-2017".
  121. ^ a b "GASO - la banque du blason".
  122. ^ a b En quête d’identité : Armoiries et sceaux en Haute Provence, Archives départementales des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, 2009, p. 16
  123. ^ Vincent J. O’Malley, Saints of Africa p. 58, 2001, (ISBN 0-87973-373-X).
  124. ^ Adamson, Robert (1911). "Gassendi, Pierre" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). pp. 503–504.
  125. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
  126. ^ Baratier, Duby & Hildesheimer, p. 153.
  127. ^ Traité des eaux minérales de Digne, Ricavy (Médecin), Aix. Les frères Mouret,1789, 56 p.
  128. ^ Observations sur différentes maladies faites par M. Ricavy,... pour servir de suite à son Traité sur les eaux minérales de Digne, Ricavy (Médecin), Guichard fils, 1790, 26p.

Bibliography edit

  • Anonymous (2007). [Atlas of tourist accommodation] (PDF) (in French). Observatoire départemental du tourisme. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  • Alphand, Patrice (1989). "Les Sociétés populaires". La Révolution dans les Basses-Alpes. Annales de Haute-Provence, bulletin de la société scientifique et littéraire des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence. Vol. 307.
  • Baratier, Édouard (1961). La démographie provençale du XIIIe au XVIe siècles, avec chiffres de comparaison pour le XVIIIe siècle. Démographie et société. Vol. 5. Paris: SEVPEN/EHESS.
  • Baratier, Édouard; Duby, Georges; Hildesheimer, Ernest (1969). Atlas historique. Provence, Comtat Venaissin, principauté d'Orange, comté de Nice, principauté de Monaco [Historical Atlas . Provence, Venaissin County, Principality of Orange County of Nice, Principality of Monaco] (in French). Paris: Librairie Armand Colin.(BnF no FRBNF35450017h)
  • Coolidge, William Augustus Brevoort (1911). "Digne" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 268.
  • Garcin, Jean (2004). "La résistance armée". Basses-Alpes 39-45. 7.
  • Labadie, Jean-Christophe (2013). Les Maisons d'école [The schoolhouses] (in French). Digne-les-Bains: Archives départementales des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence. ISBN 978-2-86-004-015-0.
  • Panarotto, Serge (2007). Chapelles de Provence : chapelles rurales et petits édifices religieux. Patrimoines. Aix-en-Provence: Édisud. ISBN 978-2-7449-0817-0.
  • Reymond, Guy (1993). "Ça sentait la liberté et l'espérance" : histoire de la libération de Digne, 14–20 août 1944. Les Petites affiches.
  • Zérubia, Roger (2012). "L'habitat rural antique des Hostelleries de Gaubert à Digne". Chroniques de Haute-Provence. 368.

External links edit

  • (in French)
  • Tourist office website (in French)
  • Ville de Digne-les-Bains (in French)
  • Map and Information

digne, bains, other, uses, disambiguation, digne, redirects, here, other, uses, digne, disambiguation, french, pronunciation, diɲ, occitan, dinha, banhs, simply, historically, digne, dinha, classical, norm, digno, mistralian, norm, prefecture, alpes, haute, pr. For other uses see Digne les Bains disambiguation Digne redirects here For other uses see Digne disambiguation Digne les Bains French pronunciation diɲ le bɛ Occitan Dinha dei Banhs or simply and historically Digne Dinha in the classical norm or Digno in the Mistralian norm is the prefecture of the Alpes de Haute Provence department in the Provence Alpes Cote d Azur region of Southeastern France As of 2018 the commune had a population of 16 333 Its inhabitants are called Dignois masculine and Dignoises feminine Digne les Bains Dinha dei Banhs Occitan Prefecture and communeA view of Digne les BainsCoat of armsLocation of Digne les BainsDigne les BainsShow map of FranceDigne les BainsShow map of Provence Alpes Cote d AzurCoordinates 44 05 36 N 6 14 11 E 44 0933 N 6 2364 E 44 0933 6 2364CountryFranceRegionProvence Alpes Cote d AzurDepartmentAlpes de Haute ProvenceArrondissementDigne les BainsCantonDigne les Bains 1 and 2IntercommunalityProvence Alpes AgglomerationGovernment Mayor 2021 2026 Patricia Granet Brunello 1 DVG Area1117 07 km2 45 20 sq mi Population 2021 2 17 192 Density150 km2 380 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST INSEE Postal code04070 04000Elevation524 1 731 m 1 719 5 679 ft avg 608 m or 1 995 ft 1 French Land Register data which excludes lakes ponds glaciers gt 1 km2 0 386 sq mi or 247 acres and river estuaries Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Site and location 1 2 Neighbouring communes 1 3 Climate 1 4 Geology and terrain 1 5 IUGS geological heritage site 1 6 Hydrography 1 7 Channels of communication and transport 1 7 1 Road network 1 7 2 Railway network 1 7 3 Public transport 1 8 Natural and technological risks 1 9 Attached communes 2 Toponymy 3 History 3 1 Prehistory and antiquity 3 2 Middle Ages 3 3 Early Modern era 3 4 French Revolution and the First Empire 3 5 Contemporary era 3 5 1 WWII 3 5 1 1 Liberation 3 5 1 2 The end of the war 3 6 From 1945 to the early 21st century 4 Politics and administration 4 1 List of mayors 4 2 Cantons 4 3 Intercommunality 4 4 Environmental policy 4 5 International relations 5 Population and society 5 1 Demography 5 2 Area and population 5 3 Education 5 4 Sports 5 5 Health 5 6 Garrison city 5 7 Religion 6 Economy 6 1 Revenues of the population and taxation 6 2 Employment 6 3 Agriculture 6 4 Companies and shops 6 4 1 Industry 6 4 2 Shops 6 5 Service sector 6 6 Tourism 6 6 1 Economic overview 6 6 2 Thermal baths 7 Local culture and heritage 7 1 Places and monuments 7 1 1 Religious architecture 7 1 2 Civil and military architecture 7 2 Culture 7 2 1 Cultural references 7 3 Traditional celebrations 7 4 Arts festivals 7 5 Sports competitions 7 6 Heraldry 8 Notable people 8 1 Public servants and religion 8 2 The Arts 8 3 Science 8 4 Sport 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Bibliography 11 External linksGeography edit nbsp Digne les Bains and neighboring municipalitiesSite and location edit Located on the edge of the Prealps of Digne fr and on both sides of the river Bleone which flows southwest through the middle of the commune and crosses the town it forms part of the commune s northeastern and southwestern borders Digne les Bains is the capital of the Department of Alpes de Haute Provence Placed in the geographical centre of the Department the commune is home to 17 400 inhabitants making it one of the smaller prefectures of France by its population The town centre is at 608 metres 1 995 ft altitude 3 Digne is a sprawling commune in the plain formed around the Bleone Valley given that the terrain that surrounds it is very rugged The old town is built on a hill between the Bleone and the torrent of the hot springs but the town has gradually extended in the three directions of the valleys especially downstream Its geographical location is quite remarkable given that it lies at the edge of the Prealps on a thrust fault that bears its name A part of the town is completely enclosed in the Bleone Valley while the town extends widely on a gentler relief downstream With the annexation of neighbouring towns especially downstream the town extends over 8 kilometres 5 0 mi in length Panoramic views of Dignes les Bains nbsp General view of the city from west to east nbsp The old centre from east to west nbsp An aerial view of the centre from west to east nbsp An aerial view of the centre from the east towards the direction of the Durance riverNeighbouring communes edit The communes surrounding Digne les Bains are La Robine sur Galabre Le Brusquet Marcoux Archail Tartonne Clumanc Chaudon Norante Chateauredon Le Chaffaut Saint Jurson Aiglun Champtercier and Thoard Climate edit Digne les Bains features a mid latitude humid subtropical climate Koppen climate classification Cfa with strong hot summer humid continental climate Dfa and hot summer mediterranean climate Csa influences Summers are hot and relatively dry and winters are mildly cold and relatively wet with air frosts being regular in the winter months Climate data for Digne les Bains Alpes de Haute Provence FranceMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 21 5 70 7 22 6 72 7 24 4 75 9 28 82 32 5 90 5 36 6 97 9 39 5 103 1 39 1 102 4 34 2 93 6 30 5 86 9 23 8 74 8 20 8 69 4 39 5 103 1 Mean daily maximum C F 9 48 10 8 51 4 14 6 58 3 17 2 63 0 21 7 71 1 26 1 79 0 29 8 85 6 29 3 84 7 24 4 75 9 19 66 13 55 9 2 48 6 18 7 65 7 Daily mean C F 4 3 39 7 5 4 41 7 8 7 47 7 11 3 52 3 15 4 59 7 19 5 67 1 22 7 72 9 22 3 72 1 18 2 64 8 13 6 56 5 8 3 46 9 4 9 40 8 12 9 55 2 Mean daily minimum C F 0 4 31 3 0 1 31 8 2 8 37 0 5 4 41 7 9 2 48 6 12 8 55 0 15 5 59 9 15 3 59 5 11 9 53 4 8 2 46 8 3 6 38 5 0 6 33 1 7 1 44 8 Record low C F 13 4 7 9 12 7 9 1 10 2 13 6 3 1 26 4 1 9 28 6 3 2 37 8 7 3 45 1 7 45 1 8 35 2 2 9 26 8 7 3 18 9 12 8 9 0 13 4 7 9 Average precipitation mm inches 45 1 8 37 1 1 46 41 7 1 64 67 1 2 64 63 6 2 50 53 2 1 34 3 1 35 55 8 2 20 79 1 3 11 84 2 3 31 73 2 9 61 2 4 694 9 27 36 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 5 3 4 7 5 2 8 1 7 8 6 0 4 1 4 7 5 6 7 9 6 4 6 5 72 4Mean monthly sunshine hours 170 186 7 231 6 225 2 260 5 302 4 343 4 310 2 247 191 2 159 2 148 1 2 775 4 citation needed Geology and terrain edit The commune which is at the heart of the geology has its specificities related to the ancient town clarification needed built upstream of the cluse which the Bleone has worn into the Nappe de Digne to emerge into the tertiary basin of Valensole 4 The districts of the town cover the alluvium of the streams which converge upstream of the Cluse The most eastern suburbs joined a line of limestone hills with flint of the Carixian age forming russet cliffs oriented to the south west 4 The hot springs were captured since ancient times to the point where these carixian limestones are cut by the hack of the southernmost valley descending from Entrages Their healing powers are linked to their ascent along the gypsiferous Triassic levels of the sole thrust of the Nappe de Digne 4 The most visible mountain of the commune is Le Cousson at 1 516 metres 4 974 ft the Bigue rises to 1 653 metres 5 423 ft 5 nbsp Slab ammonites nbsp Marl of the Adret fr of EscureMany reliefs lie around Digne and are objectives for hikers The Rocher de Neuf Heures Rock of Nine o clock Three chapels the Chapel of our Lady of Lourdes the Chapel of Saint Vincent and the Chapel La Croix The right bank of the Bleone Park of the Haute Provence Geological Reserve along the Caguerenard path paths to access the top of the slope over 200 metres 660 ft above the town and the crest of Andran Martignon La Bigue Trails to access the Basses Baties de Cousson and then Le Cousson The Chapel of Saint Pancrace Barre des DourbesIUGS geological heritage site edit In respect of its world famous and outstanding accumulation of fossils from a lower Jurassic marine environment the International Union of Geological Sciences IUGS included the Ammonite Slab of Digne les Bains in its assemblage of 100 geological heritage sites around the world in a listing published in October 2022 The organisation defines an IUGS Geological Heritage Site as a key place with geological elements and or processes of international scientific relevance used as a reference and or with a substantial contribution to the development of geological sciences through history 6 Hydrography edit In the Eaux Chaudes Valley there is one cold and eight hot springs used for hydrotherapy Some are radioactive and contain sulfides chlorobromides and arsenic The town is also crossed by the Bleone and the Mardaric rivers Channels of communication and transport edit Road network edit N85 Route nationale 85 fr Towards the Mediterranean Sea Towards GrenobleBarreme Digne les Bains MallemoissonRailway network edit nbsp The Train des PignesThe town is served by Chemins de fer de Provence via the Nice Digne line a narrow gauge line which operates daily It is the Train des Pignes which allows the railway to serve little inhabited places with many stations Public transport edit Bus Since 1992 Digne has the TUD Urban Transport Digne which manages the public transport Initially with six buses this service increased its vehicle fleet in 1998 with the acquisition of two buses powered by natural gas Currently six bus routes are available to the people of Digne 7 Natural and technological risks edit None of the 200 communes of the Department is in the zero seismic risk zone Digne townships are located in zone 1b low seismicity of the 1991 deterministic classification based on the historic earthquakes 8 and in zone 4 medium risk according to the EC8 probabilistic classification 2011 9 The town of Digne is also exposed to three other natural risks 9 Forest fire Flooding in the Bleone Valley and in those of its tributaries Land movement all the western part of the municipality is covered by a medium to strong hazard 10 The town of Digne is also exposed to a risk of technological origin that of transport of dangerous goods by rail road and pipeline 11 With regard to the railway the Saint Auban to Digne railway line fr is disused and has no traffic the line from Nice to Digne fr is used by passenger transport Route nationale 85 fr and the departmental road fr RD 900 former Route nationale 100 fr can be used for the road transport of dangerous goods 12 Finally the pipeline to supply natural gas is an additional risk factor to Digne 13 The foreseeable natural risk prevention plan fr PPR of the town was approved in 2008 for the risks of flooding movement of land and earthquakes 11 and the DICRIM fr has existed since 2009 14 The commune has been the subject of several orders of natural disaster in 1984 for an earthquake and many times for floods landslides and mudslides and landslides due to drought 9 Also included is a flood disaster prior to the orders The waters of the Mardaric and Eaux Chaudes which flooded the town in 1928 and the Bleone in 1973 which partially destroyed the bridge 15 This destruction was caused by the breakdown of a jam created in the bed of the Bes fr causing a wave of flooding 16 Similarly several massive landslides have happened in the history of the commune for example on 24 December 1916 which caused the collapse of part of Courbons and 2002 2003 at Villard des Dourbes 17 Earthquakes have a long history in Digne Retaining those macro seismic events felt higher than level V on the MSK scale sleepers awake falling objects we obtain the following list the specified intensities are those felt in the town the intensity may be stronger at epicentre 18 The earthquake of 31 August 1684 an intensity felt Digne of V 5 and whose epicentre was located at Digne 19 The earthquake of 2 December 1872 an intensity felt V and whose epicentre was located at Digne 20 The earthquake of 20 September 1876 an intensity felt V 5 and whose epicentre was located at Digne 21 The earthquake of 23 February 1887 an intensity felt VII and whose epicentre was located in Bussana Vecchia Liguria 22 The earthquake of 27 September 1911 an intensity felt V and whose epicentre was located at Barreme 23 The earthquake of 16 February 1915 an intensity felt V and a half and whose epicentre was located at Digne 24 The earthquake of 19 June 1984 of an intensity felt V and whose epicentre was located in Aiglum 25 Attached communes edit Courbons Corbo cited in the 13th century but the church is cited as 1180 26 was attached to Digne in 1862 27 The Priory of Sainte Eugenie ancestor of the parish church was part of the chapter of Digne 26 Jews installed here were massacred in 1335 Its fortifications were destroyed by Lesdiguieres during the Wars of Religion 1590 It had 80 feus in 1315 90 in 1471 and 507 inhabitants in 1765 27 Les Dourbes fr De Dorbas cited in 1035 3 was attached to Digne in 1974 as an associated commune The village is located on a barrier and a Motte and bailey castle was built in the 11th century 28 It had 48 feus in 1315 12 in 1471 and 249 inhabitants in 1765 296 inhabitants in 1851 62 in 1982 29 Gaubert Galbertum cited in 1180 26 was attached to Digne in 1862 30 The parish church was part of the chapter of Digne who collected the tithe 26 The square defended by the Catholic League and Sautaire was taken by Lavalette in 1591 It had 63 feus in 1315 41 in 1471 and 456 inhabitants in 1765 30 Les Sieyes or just Sieyes for short Lascieias cited in the 13th century 31 was attached to Digne in 1862 There were 10 feus in 1315 13 in 1471 and 307 inhabitants in 1765 31 The two priories Sainte Madeleine and Saint Veran were part of the chapter of Digne which received the tithes 26 During the Revolution these four municipalities each had a patriotic society fr all created after the end of 1792 32 Toponymy editThe toponym Dinia is known from the 1st century AD Ptolemy Pliny the elder Various hypotheses have been advanced According to Papon the name is formed by the hydronym Din Gaulish water with the suffix ia According to other scholars the name is derived from a Roman proper noun Din n ius 33 34 The current name of Digne les Bains was formalised on 25 June 1988 35 following the decree of 21 June 1988 published on 24 June of the same year in the Official Journal Previously the commune was simply called Digne still a frequent appellation in the current language The Vivaro Alpine Occitan ˈdiɲɔ is written as Dinha in the classical norm fr The Provencal ˈdiɲɔ is written as Digno in the Mistralian norm History editMain article History of Digne les Bains fr Prehistory and antiquity edit Digne les Bains dates back to the Neolithic era The presence of three rivers the Bleone the Mardaric and the Eaux Chaudes made the place ideal for human settlement Before the Roman conquest it was the capital of the Bodiontici or Brodiontii whose name is found on the Tropaeum Alpium at La Turbie The town then became a Roman town named Dinia in the 1st century and became a frequent commercial stop during the Roman era Following the Romans it was known as Digna by 780 3 and was appreciated for its thermal waters citation needed There are a few rural settlements near to the town such as the Hotelleries de Gaubert southeast of the town where the excavated building was occupied from the beginning of the 1st century to the end of the 4th century 36 In this area at the foot of Le Cousson the soil has been cultivated continuously from antiquity right up to the recent reforestation 37 Middle Ages edit Two separate districts were formed The town and the city The town an ancient site was surrounded with the castrum of the episcopal chateau built on the Rock The two neighbourhoods functioned as two independent entities from each other and from their inception The town remained under the supervision of the provost of the chapter while the city or castrum was of the bishop 38 The arrival of the Angevins at the head of the County of Provence in 1246 accelerated the recovery process of the comital rights usurped during the previous period by lay or ecclesiastical lords 39 The return of the comtal power in the city led to a change in the relationship between local authorities and community In 1260 the city of Digne was given the right to appoint cominaux responsible for ensuring the management of the city 40 The consolidation of the two sites was done administratively in 1385 by institutional trustees replacing the cominaux responsible for representing both the city and the village The institution evolved with administrative rationalisation at the beginning of the 15th century 40 From 1475 preaching by Franciscans caused several murderous anti Jewish riots 41 Early Modern era edit Like the rest of France Digne was taken in the Wars of Religion In 1562 the Huguenots broke into the cathedral shredded the tables and smashed statues removed relics and ornaments and burnt them with the choir on the forecourt 42 The town was attacked by Protestants in 1574 43 In 1575 it was the Church of Saint Jerome which was sacked 42 In the following years the city remained under pressure In 1579 the captain of Archal occupied the surrounding countryside 44 In 1589 with the advent of Henry IV the ultra Catholics in the Catholic League controlled the town until 1591 The same year the town fell before the Royal armies of Lesdiguieres The cathedral guarded by the defenders was attacked bombarded with catapults and then stormed 45 It is also during this period that the inhabitants seized the chateau of the bishops on Le Rochas destroying it to prevent it from falling into the hands of one party or another 45 French Revolution and the First Empire edit The news of the storming of the Bastille was welcomed this event announced the end of royal arbitrariness and perhaps more profound changes in the organization of the France Immediately after the arrival of the new a great phenomenon of collective fear seized France the fear of an aristocratic conspiracy wishing to recover their privileges Rumors of troops in arms devastating everything in their path propagated at high speed causing shots of weapons the organization of militias and anti aristocratic violence This great fear arrived in Seyne on 31 July and belonging to the current fear of the Maconnais reached Digne and its region on 31 July 1789 the day before spreading to Riez where it arrived during the day and Moustiers and Castellane 46 The city was established as the capital of the Basses Alpes district fr from March 1790 to the creation of the departments The patriotic society fr of Digne was founded in September 1790 the second Department by seniority it was affiliated with the Jacobins in June 1791 and became a relay of the club in the Department accepting the affiliations of many clubs in the Basses Alpes 32 It also received the request of affiliation of Carpentras 47 First called Bourgeois Alcove it then took the name of Patriotic Club then on 9 October 1792 Societe des amis de la Constitution de la Liberte de l Egalite Society of friends of the Constitution of freedom of equality It established a committee of correspondence responsible for relations with other societies affiliated on 14 November 1792 48 On 10 and 11 January 1793 General Peyron fr performed a descent from Marseilles supported by the Marseille club goers with weapons He took revenge because he was unable to obtain the post of attorney general trustee 49 two departmental administrators were removed 50 and a fine of 13 000 livres paid to the Marseille club In 1792 1793 the section of Digne was controlled by the federalists fr In connection with the section of Marseille it disseminated the ideas of the Girondists until their proscription on 31 May 1793 and the crushing of the federalist insurrection in July which resulted in a sentence to death in Digne 51 On 5 frimaire year III the Representant en mission Gauthier fr purified the society 52 Digne welcomed the prefecture under the Consulate The prefect Lameth 1802 1805 created a shaded promenade between Pre de Foire and the banks of the Bleone and planted plane trees on the boulevard Gassendi 53 In early March 1815 Napoleon Bonaparte passed through Digne les Bains on his way from imprisonment on the island of Elba gathering support as he moved north This was early in his Hundred Days which ended with his defeat at the Battle of Waterloo Contemporary era edit In 1851 the announcement of the coup d etat of 2 December caused uplift in rural areas and peasants installed a provisional government in Digne 3 As many municipalities of the Department Digne acquired schools well before the Jules Ferry laws 54 However no instruction was given to girls in 1861 only the Falloux Laws 1851 required the opening of a girls school in the communes with more than 800 inhabitants 55 and that Courbons and Gaubert small neighbouring rural communes have a girls school It was only in the 1860s that the town of Digne chose to open a school for girls plus the Gaubert and Courbons schools for girls 56 It was with the Ferry laws that all girls of Digne and the attached villages were regularly educated In 1862 Digne absorbed the neighbouring areas of Courbons Gaubert and Les Sieyes 35 These connected communes also had their schools each a school for boys 54 with Courbons and Gaubert furthermore possessing a school for girls 55 The commune of Dourbes had two schools for boys at Dourbes and at Villard 54 and none for girls 55 210 people of Digne died for France during World War I The hospital took care of the soldiers injured in the fighting including nearly seventy who died of their injuries and are buried in the military cemetery of the village square This square also includes the bodies of two soldiers who died during the Second World War WWII edit The first resistance fighters were a group organized around Simone Pellissier who distributed the journal Combat from 1941 57 On 1 May 1942 she laid a wreath at the war memorial during a demonstration she was arrested the next day 57 with six other protesters 58 Digne was occupied by Italy then by the German army following the invasion of the free zone after the landing of the Allies in North Africa on 8 November 1942 Thirty four Jews were arrested in Digne before being deported 59 With the dissolution of the Armee de Vichy fr Commandant Chaumont of the 20th bataillon de chasseurs alpins fr began to structure the local Organisation de resistance de l armee ORA 57 Liberation edit On 16 August 1944 the city was bombed by P 47 Thunderbolts which took off from field close to Bastia in Corsica Their goal was the great bridge of Digne crossing the Bleone but only a single bomb reached the bridge impeding the passage of vehicles for only a few hours Several buildings were damaged 60 The bombing killed twenty four civilians and two Germans 60 25 in total according to Jean Garcin 61 The city was liberated on 19 August 1944 61 by Taskforce Butler a motorized detachment of armoured elements infantry and artillery from the 36th U S Texas infantry division and the 45th U S infantry division assisted by the forces of the Resistance The release of Digne was part of a movement of circumvention of the Rhone Valley across the Alps by the Route Napoleon entrusted to Taskforce Butler and which aimed to cut the retreat of the German army stationed in Provence In Aspres sur Buech the column moved westward in the direction of the Rhone and Crest Battle of Montelimar The fighting was in the day with six killed and eleven wounded on the Allied side and at least 21 killed on the German side 62 German soldiers who fell during the fighting for the liberation of Digne were buried in the German military square of the cemetery of the village with the other soldiers killed during the occupation during various battles against the forces of Resistance In March 1958 their bodies were exhumed and transferred to the German military cemetery of Dagneux in Ain Immediately after the Liberation the cleanup began Executions after trials with a judge but without lawyers took place 63 The German prisoner of war camp had up to 2 700 prisoners 64 One of them participated in the rescue expedition after the double air disaster of the Montagne du Cheval Blanc fr in 1948 65 The end of the war edit From the beginning of 1945 new convoys of troops moved through the town in the direction of the pockets of German resistance around the Ubaye From 1945 to the early 21st century edit In 1974 the neighboring village of Dourbes was attached to Digne 35 The municipality changed its name to Digne les Bains in 1988 35 Nowadays the town of Digne les Bains continues to expand mainly along the banks of the Bleone It forms with Entrages Marcoux La Robine sur Galabre and Mezel the Communaute de communes des Trois Vallees fr CC3V The areas of Le Pigeonnier and Barbejas have been classified as Sensitive urban zones On 24 March 2015 Germanwings Flight 9525 carrying 150 people including six crewmembers had a rapid descent from cruising altitude approximately 45 minutes after takeoff It crashed a few miles from the city en route to Dusseldorf from Barcelona 66 Politics and administration editSee also 2020 French municipal elections List of mayors edit nbsp Digne les Bains Town Hall former Desmichel barracksList of mayors since the Liberation Term start Term end Name Affiliation Other details1944 1946 Joseph Fontaine Resistance President of the Comite departemental de liberation President of the delegation speciale 67 Arises and is elected under the Resistance label in May 1945 68 1946 1947 Paul Jouve SFIO General councillor Senator1947 1971 Julien Romieu PR Medical doctor General councillor1971 1977 Rene VilleneuveMarch 1977 June 1995 Pierre Rinaldi RPR Member of the National Assembly 1993 President of the General Council 1992 1998 June 1995 March 2001 Jean Louis Bianco PS Secretary General of the Elysee 1982 1991 Cabinet member 1991 1993 Regional councillor 1992 1998 Member of the National Assembly 1997 2012 President of the General Council 1998 2012 Deputy Mayor 2001 2002 March 2001 April 2014 Serge Gloaguen PS then DVG PS DVG 69 Regional councillor 2004 2010 President of the CC Asse Bleone Verdon 2013 2014 April 2014 In office Patricia Granet Brunello 70 71 DVG PS DVG Hospital doctor Departmental councillor 2015 2021 President of the CC Asse Bleone Verdon 2014 2016 President of the CA Provence Alpes 2017 present After the Conseil d Etat nullified the results of the 2020 municipal election in Digne les Bains the prefect of Alpes de Haute Provence appointed a delegation speciale presided by Herve Belmont 22 October 17 December 2021 72 Patricia Granet Brunello then returned to the mayorship List of mayors from the French Revolution to the Liberation Start End Name Party Other details1789 30 December 1790 Dr Ricavy Jean Baptiste Medical doctor1791 1792 Joseph Paul Simon1792 1793 Melchior Dieude1794 1795 Francois Colomb Duvillard1796 1798 Louis Francoul1798 1800 Toussaint Itard1800 1802 Jean Allibert1802 1805 Paul Francoul1805 1806 Francois Grassy1806 1810 Gaspard Sauve1810 1815 Francois Gassendy Tartonne1815 1816 Pierre Itard1816 1818 Leon du Chaffaut1818 1821 Francois Grassy1821 1821 Etienne Hesmiol de Berre1821 1825 Bienvenu Victorien de Jassaud de Thorame1825 1829 Jules du Chaffaut1829 1831 Jean Baptiste Gras1831 1831 Fantin Itard1831 1834 Antoine Fortoul1834 1837 Hugues Hugues1837 1844 Pierre Allibert1844 1848 Julien Francoul1848 1849 Joseph Itard1849 1852 Alexandre Fruchier1852 1857 Alexandre Allibert1857 1860 Achille de Vallavieille1860 1870 Auguste Hugues1870 1874 Paul Roustan1874 1879 Louis Builly1880 1881 Jules Blanc1881 1897 Marius Soustre1897 1919 Docteur Charles Romieu1919 1921 Joseph Reinach1921 1921 Eugene Vial1921 1929 Charles Fruchier1929 1935 Charles Bouquier1935 1936 Charles Fruchier1936 1941 Julien Romieu Republican Radical and Radical Socialist Party Medical doctor1942 1944 Henri EvrardCantons edit nbsp Alpes de Haute Provence prefecture building in Digne les BainsDigne les Bains is divided into two cantons 73 Departemental councillors Affiliation Canton Cantonal code Population 2012 Rene Massette PS Digne les Bains 1 04 04 11 965 incl 10 189 within the commune Genevieve PrimiterraPierre Catillon LR Digne les Bains 2 04 05 12 398 incl 6 655 within the commune Sandra RaponiIntercommunality edit Digne is part of the following communities From 2002 to 2013 of the Community of communes of les Trois Vallees fr of which it was the seat From 2013 to 2017 of the Communaute de communes Asse Bleone Verdon fr of which it was the seat Since 1 January 2017 of the Communaute d agglomeration Provence Alpes of which it is the seat Environmental policy edit Digne les Bains is ranked three flowers in the Contest of Flowery Towns and Villages The city was rewarded with the three flowers in 2007 s Contest of Flowery Towns and Villages 74 International relations edit Digne is twinned with nbsp Bad Mergentheim Germany nbsp Borgomanero Italy nbsp Douma Lebanon nbsp Kamaishi Iwate Prefecture Japan 20 April 1994 75 Population and society editDemography edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Historical populationYearPop p a 196814 722 197515 416 0 66 198215 149 0 25 199016 087 0 75 199916 064 0 02 200717 455 1 04 201216 844 0 71 201716 460 0 46 Source INSEE 76 In 2006 the commune launched a housing construction project aiming to increase the population beyond 20 000 inhabitants the lower threshold for obtaining certain public aid Area and population edit The town of Digne les Bains has an area of 117 07 square kilometres 45 20 sq mi and a population of 17 268 inhabitants ranked as follows 77 Rank Population Area DensityFrance 553rd 147th 5 414thProvence Alpes Cote d Azur 43rd 19th 220thAlpes de Haute Provence 2nd 8th 6thArrondissement of Digne les Bains 1st 3rd 2ndEducation edit Seat of the prefecture and the inspection academique fr of Provence the city of Digne also has the main educational establishments of the Department Fourteen schools 11 primary schools a private primary school under contract and whose teachers are employees of National Education and two nursery schools 78 The Maria Borrely and Pierre Gassendi colleges fr 79 Three lycees including the Lycee professionnel Beau de Rochas 80 the Pierre Gilles de Gennes fr and the multipurpose Alexandra David Neel fr school 81 which offers also two BTS certificates and further training of local initiative A University Institute of Technology which provides lessons in agronomy DUT engineering of the environment DUT administrative and commercial management DUT quality industrial logistics and organization business tourism geomatics professional license 82 A Graduate School of Teaching and Education fr ESPE Sports edit Digne was elected as the Sportiest town in France fr among towns with less than 20 000 inhabitants in 2006 by the daily newspaper L Equipe The town has several sports facilities with free access or reserved for the many sporting clubs and schools These include gyms a stadium an equestrian centre a golf course and a public swimming pool It is one of the rare French towns to provide free access to tennis courts At the request of the Junior Town Council a skatepark has been renovated which is open access Health edit The town s hospitals have 480 beds 5 Garrison city edit The following units have held garrison in Digne 22nd light infantry regiment fr one battalion in the middle of the 19th century 3rd infantry regiment fr Currently several gendarmerie units are based in Digne In addition to the capital of community brigade 83 there is a motorised brigade a platoon of monitoring and intervention fr PSIG and a squadron of Mobile Gendarmerie 84 Religion edit For Catholic worship the city is the seat of the departmental bishopric and therefore the Diocese of Digne Riez and Sisteron The bishop is Monsignor Jean Philippe Nault fr He was appointed in 2014 and is the youngest Bishop of France born in 1965 citation needed The Catholic faithful have two places of worship for Mass Notre Dame du Bourg fr and Saint Jerome The members of the Muslim faith also have their place of worship 85 as well as Protestants 86 and Evangelicals 87 Cardinal Jean Pierre Ricard retired here in 2019 from Bordeaux He later admitted to behav ing in a reprehensible way with a young girl aged 14 while at Marseilles some 35 years previously as confirmed on 7 November 2022 by Archbishop Eric de Moulins Beaufort the president of the Bishops Conference of France 88 Economy editRevenues of the population and taxation edit The taxation of households and businesses to Digne les Bains in 2010 89 Tax Communal Intercomunal Departmental RegionalHousing Tax fr TH 21 60 0 00 5 53 0 00 Land tax on the built up properties TFPB 44 68 0 00 14 49 2 36 Land tax on the non built up properties TFPNB 81 75 0 00 47 16 8 85 Business tax fr TP 0 00 37 01 0 00 0 00 Employment edit In 2017 the active population amounted to 6 422 persons including 939 unemployed 90 These workers are mostly employed 86 and are employed in the town 83 90 Agriculture edit At the end of 2015 the primary sector agriculture forestry fishing had 27 active institutions within the meaning of INSEE including non professional operators and 144 salaried jobs 90 The number of professional farms according to the Agreste survey of the Ministry of Agriculture is 37 in 2010 It was 44 in 2000 91 and 106 in 1988 92 Currently these operators are essentially turned to breeding sheep and cattle 91 From 1988 to 2000 the useful agricultural land SAU strongly increased from 1 002 hectares 2 480 acres to 2 902 hectares 7 170 acres 92 The SAU has increased slightly during the last decade to 2 989 hectares 7 390 acres 91 The agricultural activity of the surrounding communes allows the existence of Alp Agri an agricultural dealer with 30 employees 93 The vine was cultivated for wine into the 1950s which led to local consumption in Digne This cultivation has declined to occupy no more than a few hectares in 2005 94 The olive groves of the municipality can claim the Huile d olive de Provence AOC fr Olive Oil of Provence AOC appellation Companies and shops edit Industry edit At the end of 2015 the secondary sector industry and construction had 213 institutions using 348 employees with no establishment exceeding 50 employees 90 Shops edit Two Provencal markets fr are held each week the markets are held on Wednesday 95 and Saturday 96 The market in Digne les Bains nbsp Provencal pottery nbsp Arts and crafts nbsp Old agricultural machinery exhibition nbsp A stand selling olivesService sector edit At the end of 2015 the tertiary sector commerce services had 1 096 establishments with 2 777 salaried jobs in addition to 420 institutions in the administrative sector together with the health and social sector and education employing 5 465 people 90 Digne les Bains is the seat of the Chambre de commerce et d industrie des Alpes de Haute Provence It manages the Sisteron Theze aerodrome and the J Gage centre Chemins de Fer de Provence employs about 50 people in Digne 5 SAMSE a dealer in building materials employs 73 people 97 Still in the area of trade supermarkets are also important employers Carrefour employs 250 people and Intermarche has 55 employees 5 Orange employs approximately 300 employees 5 Among computer service companies Xsalto offering web hosting development and installation employs 22 staff 98 The banking sector provides also some employers The Groupe Caisse d Epargne has 50 employees and the Bank of France has 30 employees 5 Finally the Renault dealership is another large private employer with 28 employees 99 Tourism edit Economic overview edit According to the departmental observatory of tourism the tourist function is secondary for the municipality with less than one tourist greeted per capita 100 However it offers substantial accommodation capacity mainly merchant 101 Several accommodation facilities for tourism exist in the commune There were 9 hotels in January 2020 of which 4 with two stars 3 with three stars and 2 unclassified The total hotel capacity was 240 rooms 90 There are a two star and a three star campsite in the commune with a total capacity of 251 pitches 90 Furnished or unfurnished apartments provide a capacity of hundreds of places 102 103 Bed and breakfast 104 Collective accommodation is also present with among other things lodges 105 Finally second homes provide a valuable complement to the capacity 106 678 in number these represent 6 5 of homes 90 Thermal baths edit The spa treats respiratory diseases and rheumatism They use a hot spring at 50 C and 110 000 overnight stays are made through this activity The station is given financial autonomy to hire 76 employees in the high season September October 5 The establishment has a Zen Space and Fitness offering massages of the face and the body and swimming in thermal water at 33 C 107 Hydrotheraphy in Digne les Bains nbsp Hydrotherapy in Digne les Bains nbsp Spa buildingsLocal culture and heritage editPlaces and monuments edit nbsp Detail of the Dalle a ammonitesThe Dalle a ammonites a classified site is a rocky layer dating back 200 million years where one can find more than 1 500 fossils of ammonites containing some which reach a diameter of 70 centimetres 28 in Religious architecture edit The commune maintains a southern aspect and has remarkable heritage items including two cathedrals an archaeological crypt under the Cathedral of Notre Dame du Bourg Our Lady of the City the chapels Saint Pancrace Our Lady of Lourdes etc The Cathedral Notre Dame du Bourg fr an historical monument 108 is a Romanesque cathedral whose foundations date back to the 9th century Victim of numerous attacks and looting it was renovated at the beginning of the 13th century Parts from the 11th and 12th centuries still exist Its white marble altar is of the Merovingian era An archaeological crypt in the basement of the cathedral aids in the discovery of the history of Digne les Bains In the crypt is the exact location of the origins of the city attested by the presence of ancient walls from the 1st century AD This corresponds to an urban space and implementation of three buildings of Christianity from the 5th century to the 11th century 109 The Saint Jerome Cathedral also an historical monument 110 is a Gothic cathedral from the 15th and 16th centuries The facade is from the 19th century Cathedrals in Digne les Bains nbsp The facade of Notre Dame du Bourg nbsp The facade of the cathedral of Saint Jerome nbsp Media related to Notre Dame du Bourg at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Media related to Saint Jerome at Wikimedia CommonsThe Notre Dame de Lourdes Church was built in 1870 on the Mountain of the Cross north of Digne though at the bottom of the slope The brick walls are its main feature with its large size 111 The chapel of Saint Vincent belonged to an abbey or priory It is still in good condition 111 The Chapel of the Cross located nearby is gradually becoming a ruin 111 There are numerous churches in the connected communes In Courbons the parish church is Notre Dame des Anges 13th 14th century 27 It was dedicated to St Clair in the 17th century 26 Its single nave consists of three arched barrel bays and emerges into a square choir 112 There is also a chapel of Saint Pierre south of the village an establishment which may be very old 26 The Church of Dourbes is under the name of Saint Genest and the oldest parts are from the 12th and 13th centuries 26 29 In Villard the Saint Jean Baptiste Chapel probably dates from the 17th century 26 In Gaubert the parish church of Saint Etienne was built in Romanesque style at the end of the 16th and 17th century 30 Grand Saint Martin farm incorporates some remains of a medieval priory 26 The chapel of St Sebastian is situated on the ridge east of the village 26 In Sieyes the Church of Sainte Marie Madeleine 26 31 remains along with the Church of Saint Veran between the stadium and the cemetery 26 A more recent chapel was built next to the town hall and school There are also two chapels on the mountain which overlooks the ravine of Eaux Chaudes to the north Saint Pons which is in ruins and the Chapel of Saint Pancrace The latter dates from the 17th century and is being restored It has the distinction of having its bells suspended in a flat metal campanile The pilgrimage of 12 May when the priest blessed the sources remained into the 1950s and has recently resumed 113 Civil and military architecture edit The remains of fortifications can be recognised if one pays attention to the plan of the old town around the central district built on the heights Some of the walls and some towers which surrounded the city from the 14th century can still be seen These remains of ramparts are currently based in the landscape of the dwellings Hotel Thoron de la Robine from the 17th century 114 The fountain fr from 1829 which is an historical monument 115 The sculptures From 1983 to 1991 an annual international event of sculpture revealed international talent Award winning works in Carrara marble adorn roundabouts squares and public gardens Culture edit nbsp Museum of the Haute Provence Geological Reserve in DigneThe Museum of the Haute Provence Geological Reserve fr and its butterfly garden The Gassendi Museum fr is a modern museum enabling the public to move from art to science and from the old to the contemporary across a route in time Its archaeology section was founded in 1889 116 117 CAIRN is an informal art of nature Research Center 118 The Museum of the Second World War contains documents and period objects evoking the strategic role of Digne in alpine defense and the damage suffered Intercommunal library of the Trois Vallees The Museum of Alexandra David Neel located in her house fr 119 The Botanic Garde of Les CordeliersCultural references edit Digne is a setting for much of the first section of Victor Hugo s 1862 novel Les Miserables where it is the home of Bishop Myriel In early English editions the town s name was rendered D The town is left unnamed in most stage and film adaptations The asteroid 10088 Digne was named after the town by its discoverer Belgian astronomer Eric Walter Elst Traditional celebrations edit Digne celebrates lavender a symbol of the region in the first weekend of August at the Corso of lavender A funfair is installed for the occasion and a fireworks display is organized A parade of floats is held including a procession consisting of a dozen floats in lavender and crepon led by 500 musicians and dancers from various nations The Corso draws 10 15 000 people to the town each day The Corso of Lavender in August nbsp A float of lavender at the Corso in Digne nbsp Miss Corso at the Corso of Lavender in Digne nbsp A Corso float before the statue of Gassendi in DigneArts festivals edit In May every year since 2002 the city has organized a festival of urban culture and music Initiated by the Ligue de l Enseignement des Alpes de Haute Provence League of education of Alpes de Haute Provence and the L ADSEA The festival is now organized by the Ecole du sous Sol School of the Underground association The objective of this festival is to make urban culture graffiti slam street basketball hip hop dance skateboarding known to a wider public along with contemporary music rap rock pop electro through various artistic and cultural events under the program A sports tournament closes the event The Hip Hop dance battle and the basketball tournament are open to girls two girls and two boys by team for the 4 vs 4 battle and at least one girl by team for the 3 vs 3 basketball tournament An open stage is offered to amateur and semi professional teams Every spring each year the Rene Char cultural centre receives cinema personalities and projects art and test films at the Festival les Rencontres cinematographiques de Digne Its president is Jean Pierre Castagna Sports competitions edit Each year since 2004 the Raid des Terres Noires fr Raid of the Black Lands mountain biking event brings together more than a thousand participants Raid of the Black Lands nbsp A mountain biking track along the crest of a hill nbsp A mountain biker negotiates a tricky turnFrom 2013 the VTT Rando 04 club organizes the Enduro of the Black Lands Enduro event Created in 1999 by The Athletic Club of Digne the Half marathon of the Ammonites connects the village of Barles with the prefecture at the beginning of September each year until 2002 Its rolling course measured at 21 1 kilometres 13 1 mi according to the protocols of the French Athletics Federation goes through the most spectacular sites of the Haute Provence Geological Reserve fr some of which are world renowned Examples of these include the clues of Barles and Peoure the Velodrome d Esclangon Velodrome of Escanglon Voile de Facibelle Veil of Facibelle the Demoiselles coiffees the Ichthyosaur and the Dalle a ammonites It has been awarded two borders by the guide Le Bipede The Biped citation needed It welcomed more than 1 550 runners in 4 editions citation needed This sporting event had its a 5th edition in 2013 on the 100th anniversary of the Barles road and in favour of the National League Against Cancer fr in memory of Cyril Gues the first winner of this competition who died in 2012 Initiated in 2005 by the Athletic Club of Digne one edition the Trail of Cousson was resumed in 2008 by the Athletics Association 120 The race walking event offers numerous courses in the heart of the Haute Provence geological Reserve through robines fr the famous muck pre Alpine forests villages and ascents of the bar of the Dourbes and Cousson fr Free racing and animations for children as well as heritage walks are also organized parallel to sports competitions The event also fits into an exemplary sustainable development policy which gives it national recognition Heraldry edit Main article Armorial of the communes of Alpes de Haute Provence fr nbsp Arms of Digne les Bains The arms of Digne les Bains are Azure to a fleur de lis of Or accompanied at head by a cross of gules at flanks with two L letters capitalised faced Argent and in point of a letter D capitalised also of Or 121 These arms are not attested before the 17th century and the above composition is only one variant among many others existing The L can be gold and can be replaced by silver lions There are also versions without the golden L or lion azure to a fleur de lis of gold accompanied at head by a cross of silver with a letter D of the same at the point The latest version is azure to a cross of gold at head and a D of the same at head The cross is an evocation of the episcopal see and the L perhaps is a souvenir of a concession of Louis II of Anjou from the beginning of the 15th century 122 Gabriel Gillybœuf proposed in the early 1980s to replace the capitalised D with a fountain expressed in heraldic terms by a bezant fess wavy silver and azure while maintaining the cross fleur de lis and capitalised L respectively 122 The city was jointly owned by the Counts of Provence and the Bishops of Digne Hence the arms The cross symbolises the bishopric the fleur de lis as Charles of Anjou clarification needed Count of Provence The letter D is the letter of the city The letters L have been added under Louis XIV King of France Count of Provence and Forcalquier 121 Notable people edit nbsp Statue of Pierre Gassendi in the square of the Cathedral of St Jerome of Digne nbsp Plaque in honor of Bishop Bienvenu de MiollisPublic servants and religion edit Saint Domnin died AD 379 and Saint Vincent of Digne first and second Bishops of Digne 123 Douceline of Digne 1214 1274 founded the Beguines of Marseilles and devoted her life to the poor and the sick amp her brother Hugh of Digne died 1275 an ascetical writer Louis Richeome 1544 1625 a French Jesuit theologian and controversialist Pierre Gassendi 1592 1655 philosopher Catholic priest astronomer and mathematician 124 Jean Pierre Alexandre Dieude fr 1743 1819 general of the armies of the Republic and the Empire died in Digne Bienvenu de Miollis 1753 1843 Bishop of Digne 1805 to 1838 inspiration for the kind bishop in Les Miserables 125 Louis Alexis Desmichels 1779 1845 cavalry general Hippolyte Fortoul 1811 1856 journalist historian Minister of Marine 1851 Frederic Aillaud fr 1857 1924 Member of Parliament under the Third Republic died at Digne Jean Louis Bianco born 1943 politician former Mayor of Digne and Govt Minister Christian Chessel fr 1958 1996 was a White Father who was murdered in Tizi Ouzou Algeria Later disgraced Cardinal Jean Pierre Ricard retired here in 2019 88 The Arts edit nbsp Alexandra David Neel in Tibet in 1933Paul Martin fr 1830 1903 watercolour painter 126 Melchior Jaubert fr 1848 1913 painter and watercolourist Henri Jaubert fr 1860 1936 brother of the preceding painter and watercolourist Alexandra David Neel 1868 1969 a Belgian French writer spiritualist Buddhist anarchist and opera singer lived in Digne from 1928 Raphael Desire Freida 1877 1942 painter illustrator engraver Louis Botinelly 1883 1962 a French sculptor Paul Alexandre Arnoux fr 1884 1973 French poet Jean Daviot born 1962 a French contemporary artist Tristan Louis born 1971 American author entrepreneur and internet activist Greg Theveniau fr born 1973 musician Cyril Feraud born 1985 journalist and television presenterScience edit Jean Baptiste Ricavy fr 1755 1808 doctor of medicine professor at the school of Medicine of Montpellier and author 127 128 Simon Jude Honnorat fr 1783 1852 a French physician naturalist and lexicographer Alphonse Beau de Rochas 1815 1893 an engineer and thermodynamician patented the four stroke engine in 1862 Sebastien Point born 1982 physicist engineer amp researcher studies the Biological effects of high energy visible lightSport edit Jean Milesi born 1935 a French former racing cyclist rode in seven Tour de France Jean Rolland FR Wiki 1935 1967 racing driver Alain Boghossian born 1970 footballer with 296 club caps and 26 for France Nicolas Lebrun fr born 1973 professional triathlete Mickael Maschio born 1973 motocross motorcyclist Antoine Meo born 1984 multiple Motocross Enduro world champion Gregory Bernard fr born 1984 player of Rugby Union kennyS born 1995 real name Kenny Schrub professional Counter Strike Global Offensive playerSee also editChemins de Fer de Provence Gare de Digne fr Halte de Plan d eau des Ferreols fr Gare de Gaubert Le Chaffaut fr Route Napoleon Commandery of Digne of the Knights Templar Diocese of Digne Communes of the Alpes de Haute Provence department List of former communes of Alpes de Haute Provence fr List of prefects of Alpes de Haute Provence fr List of the Bishops of Digne fr List of works by Louis Botinelly Armorial of the communes of Alpes de Haute Provence fr References edit Repertoire national des elus les maires data gouv fr Plateforme ouverte des donnees publiques francaises in French 1 February 2022 Populations legales 2021 The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies 28 December 2023 a b c d de La Torre Michel 1989 Alpes de Haute Provence le guide complet des 200 communes Alpes de Haute Provence The complete guide to 200 communes in French Paris Deslogis Lacoste ISBN 2 7399 5004 7 a b c Digne les Bains Digne les Bains in French Retrieved 7 April 2015 a b c d e f g Cantons de Digne les Bains Le Tresor des regions See section Cantons de Digne les Bains Retrieved 7 April 2015 The First 100 IUGS Geological Heritage Sites PDF IUGS International Commission on Geoheritage IUGS Retrieved 13 November 2022 Se deplacer en ville le TUD Getting around the city the TUD in French Archived from the original on 10 February 2011 Retrieved 7 April 2015 La securite civile Civil security in French DDRM p 39 Dossier departemental sur les risques majeurs dans les Alpes de Haute Provence Archived from the original on 22 September 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2015 a b c Notice communale Communal notice Gaspar in French Ministere de l Ecologie du developpement durable des transports et du logement Archived from the original on 21 February 2014 Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence DDRM p 37 a b Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence DDRM p 96 Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence DDRM p 80 Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence DDRM p 81 Informations commune Commune information in French DICRIM Archived from the original on 7 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence DDRM p 24 Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence DDRM p 25 Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence DDRM p 32 Votre selection commune DIGNE LES BAINS 04070 Your selection Commune DIGNE LES BAINS 04070 Sisfrance in French BGRM Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 fiche 40210 File 40210 Sisfrance in French BRGM Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 fiche 40047 File 40047 Sisfrance in French BRGM Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 fiche 40049 File 40049 Sisfrance in French BRGM Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 fiche 1130045 File 1130045 Sisfrance in French BRGM Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 fiche 50033 File 50033 Sisfrance in French BRGM Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 fiche 40072 File 40072 Sisfrance in French BRGM Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 fiche 40176 File 40176 Sisfrance in French BRGM Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Digne Digne archaeoprovence in French Retrieved 7 April 2015 a b c Baratier Duby amp Hildesheimer 1969 p 172 Parc naturel du Luberon Autour de l An Mil en pays de Forcalquier catalogue d exposition 2007 p 31 a b Baratier Duby amp Hildesheimer 1969 p 173 a b c Baratier Duby amp Hildesheimer 1969 p 176 a b c Baratier Duby amp Hildesheimer 1969 p 200 a b Alphand 1989 pp 296 298 Charles Rostaing Essai sur la toponymie de la Provence depuis les origines jusqu aux invasions barbares Laffite Reprints Marseille 1973 1re edition 1950 p 165 166 Negre Ernest 1990 Toponymie generale de la France etymologie de 35 000 noms de lieux vol 1 Formations preceltiques celtiques romanes Geneve Librairie Droz p 623 ISBN 978 2 600 02884 4 Publications romanes et francaises a b c d Des villages de Cassini aux communes d aujourd hui Commune data sheet Digne les Bains EHESS in French Zerubia 2012 p 101 Zerubia 2012 p 99 F GUICHARD Essai sur le cominalat dans la ville de Digne 2 vol Digne 1846 Internet Archive Aurell Martin Coulet N Boyer Jean Pierre 2005 La Provence au Moyen Age Provence in the Middle Ages in French Aix en Provence a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Varitille F 2013 Digne a la fin du Moyen Age Politique et societe Digne at the end of the Middle Ages Politics and Society in French Paris Memoire soutenu a Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne dir O Matteoni a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Baratier 1961 p 72 a b Yvette Isnard Les dynasties seigneuriales d Oraison Chroniques de Haute Provence 2012 no 368 p 36 Cru Jacques 2001 Histoire des Gorges du Verdon jusqu a la Revolution History of the Verdon Gorges to the Revolution in French coedition Edisud fr and Parc naturel regional du Verdon fr p 200 ISBN 2 7449 0139 3 Gustave Lambert Histoire des guerres de religion en Provence 1530 1598 tome 2 Nyons Chantemerle 1970 edition originale 1869 p 352 a b Yvette Isnard Les dynasties seigneuriales d Oraison p 37 Michel Vovelle Les troubles de Provence en 1789 carte 154 et commentaire in Baratier Duby amp Hildesheimer 1969 Alphand 1989 p 304 Alphand 1989 p 311 Alphand 1989 p 303 Alphand 1989 p 17 Michel Vovelle Diffusion et repression du mouvement federaliste en 1793 carte 157 et commentaire in Baratier Duby amp Hildesheimer 1969 Alphand 1989 p 333 Deux siecles d activites prefectorales Two centuries of prefectural activities in French Archived from the original on 28 April 2007 a b c Labadie 2013 p 9 a b c Labadie 2013 p 16 Labadie 2013 p 18 a b c Debuts de la Resistance dans les Basses Alpes Beginning of the Resistance in the Alps Basses Association Basses Alpes 39 45 in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 Garcin 2004 p 2 Departement des Alpes de Haute Provence en 1939 1945 Department of Alpes de Haute Provence in 1939 1945 ajpn org in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 a b Reymond 1993 p 24 a b Garcin 2004 p 5 Reymond 1993 p 138 Henri Julien directeur de publication Guide du debarquement de Provence 15 aout 1944 Digne les Bains Editions de Haute Provence 1994 ISBN 2 909800 68 7 p 127 Les depots de P G de l Axe en mains francaises French prisoner of war camps of the Axis in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 Besson Andre 2005 27 et 30 janvier 1948 la double catastrophe aerienne du massif du Cheval Blanc des appareils C 47 Dakota et B 17 Flying Fortress du 61st Troop Carrier Group 14th Squadron de l USAF 27 and 30 January 1948 The double Cheval Blanc massif air disaster of C 47 Dakotas and B 17 Flying Fortress of the 61st Troop Carrier Group 14th Squadron of the USAF Chroniques de Haute Provence in French 354 122 125 Mark Deen 24 March 2015 Germanwings Airbus A320 Crashes in Digne Region in France Bloomberg Business Bloomberg com Retrieved 28 March 2015 Jean Garcin De l Armistice a la Liberation dans les Alpes de Haute Provence 17 juin 1940 20 aout 1944 Chronique essai sur l histoire de la Resistance avec un prologue 1935 1940 et un epilogue 1944 1945 Digne Imprimerie B Vial 1990 p 229 La Liberation The Liberation Basses Alpes 39 45 in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 Francois de Bouchony Le parti socialiste a besoin de conforter son ancrage municipal La Provence 3 February 2014 in French p 3 La Provence Liste des maires List of mayors PDF in French Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 22 October 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Digne les Bains le Conseil d Etat annule l election municipale de 2020 BFM TV in French 20 October 2021 Resultats dans les Alpes de Haute Provence LA VILLE DE DIGNE LES BAINS DANS LES ALPES DE HAUTE PROVENCE The town of Digne les Bains in the Alpes de Haute Provence in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 ja 釜石市 姉妹都市 友好都市 Population en historique depuis 1968 INSEE Ville de Digne les Bains in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 Liste des ecoles de la circonscription de Digne List of schools of the district of Digne in French Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Colleges publics Public Colleges in French Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Lycees professionnels Vocational schools in French Archived from the original on 21 February 2014 Lycees publics Public High Schools in French Archived from the original on 21 February 2014 Enseignement superieur Higher Education in French Archived from the original on 21 February 2014 Carte des Brigades de Gendarmerie Map of Gendarmerie Brigades PDF Groupement de gendarmerie departementale des Alpes de Haute Provence in French Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Presentation du groupement de gendarmerie departementale Presentation of the provincial gendarmerie group Prefecture des Alpes de Haute Provence in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 Mosquee de Digne les Bains Mosque of Digne les Bains in French Archived from the original on 9 February 2015 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Chapelle de Digne Chapel of Digne in French Archived from the original on 9 February 2015 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Assemblee de Dieu Eglise Evangelique Assembly of God Evangelical Church in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 a b Cardinal Jean Pierre Ricard admits to abusing 14 year old girl withdraws from religious duties ABC News Online 2022 11 08 Impots locaux a Digne les Bains Local taxes in Digne les Bains in French taxes com Retrieved 7 April 2015 a b c d e f g h Dossier complet Commune de Digne les Bains 04070 INSEE accessed 17 August 2020 in French a b c Ministere de l Agriculture Orientation technico economique de l exploitation Recensements agricoles 2010 et 2000 link Archived 6 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine a b Exploitations agricoles en 1988 et 2000 INSEE SA ALP AGRI Retrieved 8 April 2015 Reparaz Andre de 2007 Terroirs perdus terroirs constants terroirs conquis vigne et olivier en Haute Provence XIXe XXIe siecles Mediterranee 109 56 and 59 doi 10 4000 mediterranee 70 Mediterranee 109 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Marche du mercredi de Digne les Bains Wednesday market in Digne les Bains in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 Marche du samedi de Digne les Bains Saturday market in Digne les Bains in French Retrieved 8 April 2015 SAMSE Retrieved 8 April 2015 XSALTO Retrieved 8 April 2015 ESPACE AUTOMOBILES DIGNOIS Retrieved 8 April 2015 Anonymous 2007 p 6 Anonymous 2007 p 7 Anonymous 2007 p 32 Anonymous 2007 p 36 Anonymous 2007 p 38 Anonymous 2007 p 30 Anonymous 2007 p 44 Thermes Digne les Bains Retrieved 7 April 2015 Base Merimee PA00080379 Ministere francais de la Culture in French Crypte archeologique Retrieved 8 April 2015 Base Merimee PA00080378 Ministere francais de la Culture in French a b c Panarotto 2007 p 147 Jean Christophe Labadie Des Anges Musee departemental d art religieux catalogue de l exposition a la cathedrale Saint Jerome 5 juillet 30 septembre 2013 2013 ISBN 978 2 86004014 3 p 29 Panarotto 2007 p 146 Base Merimee Hotel Thoron de la Robine Ministere francais de la Culture in French Base Merimee Fontaine monumentale Ministere francais de la Culture in French Official site Retrieved 7 April 2015 Geraldine Berard Carte archeologique des Alpes de Haute Provence Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres Paris 1997 p 58 LE CAIRN Centre d Art Informel de Recherche sur la Nature Archived from the original on 14 June 2009 Office de tourisme Office of tourism Trail du Cousson Digne les Bains 2008 2017 a b GASO la banque du blason a b En quete d identite Armoiries et sceaux en Haute Provence Archives departementales des Alpes de Haute Provence 2009 p 16 Vincent J O Malley Saints of Africa p 58 2001 ISBN 0 87973 373 X Adamson Robert 1911 Gassendi Pierre Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed pp 503 504 Letter from M Francis de Miollis Carpe Horas Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 24 April 2015 Baratier Duby amp Hildesheimer p 153 Traite des eaux minerales de Digne Ricavy Medecin Aix Les freres Mouret 1789 56 p Observations sur differentes maladies faites par M Ricavy pour servir de suite a son Traite sur les eaux minerales de Digne Ricavy Medecin Guichard fils 1790 26p Bibliography edit Anonymous 2007 Atlas de l hebergement touristique Atlas of tourist accommodation PDF in French Observatoire departemental du tourisme Archived from the original PDF on 14 October 2013 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Alphand Patrice 1989 Les Societes populaires La Revolution dans les Basses Alpes Annales de Haute Provence bulletin de la societe scientifique et litteraire des Alpes de Haute Provence Vol 307 Baratier Edouard 1961 La demographie provencale du XIIIe au XVIe siecles avec chiffres de comparaison pour le XVIIIe siecle Demographie et societe Vol 5 Paris SEVPEN EHESS Baratier Edouard Duby Georges Hildesheimer Ernest 1969 Atlas historique Provence Comtat Venaissin principaute d Orange comte de Nice principaute de Monaco Historical Atlas Provence Venaissin County Principality of Orange County of Nice Principality of Monaco in French Paris Librairie Armand Colin BnF no FRBNF35450017h Coolidge William Augustus Brevoort 1911 Digne In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 268 Garcin Jean 2004 La resistance armee Basses Alpes 39 45 7 Labadie Jean Christophe 2013 Les Maisons d ecole The schoolhouses in French Digne les Bains Archives departementales des Alpes de Haute Provence ISBN 978 2 86 004 015 0 Panarotto Serge 2007 Chapelles de Provence chapelles rurales et petits edifices religieux Patrimoines Aix en Provence Edisud ISBN 978 2 7449 0817 0 Reymond Guy 1993 Ca sentait la liberte et l esperance histoire de la liberation de Digne 14 20 aout 1944 Les Petites affiches Zerubia Roger 2012 L habitat rural antique des Hostelleries de Gaubert a Digne Chroniques de Haute Provence 368 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Digne les Bains City council website in French Tourist office website in French Ville de Digne les Bains in French Map and Information Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Digne les Bains amp oldid 1201843143, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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