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Saint-Dié-des-Vosges

Saint-Dié-des-Vosges (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃ dje de voʒ] ; German: Sankt Didel), commonly referred to as just Saint-Dié, is a commune in the Vosges department, Grand Est, northeastern France.

Saint-Dié-des-Vosges
Cathedral
Location of Saint-Dié-des-Vosges
Saint-Dié-des-Vosges
Saint-Dié-des-Vosges
Coordinates: 48°17′N 6°57′E / 48.28°N 6.95°E / 48.28; 6.95
CountryFrance
RegionGrand Est
DepartmentVosges
ArrondissementSaint-Dié-des-Vosges
CantonSaint-Dié-des-Vosges-1 and 2
IntercommunalityCA Saint-Dié-des-Vosges
Government
 • Mayor (2022–2026) Bruno Toussaint[1]
Area
1
46.15 km2 (17.82 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[2]
19,319
 • Density420/km2 (1,100/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
88413 /88100
Elevation310–901 m (1,017–2,956 ft)
(avg. 343 m or 1,125 ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

It is a sub-prefecture of the department.

Geography edit

 
The city located in the Vosges mountains.

Saint-Dié is located in the Vosges Mountains 80 km (50 mi) southeast of Nancy and 80 km (50 mi) southwest of Strasbourg. This route in the valley of the river Meurthe was always the more frequented, and first to get a rail line in 1864, so now it accommodates the primary road.

Saint-Dié-des-Vosges, principal town of an arrondissement of the same name, belongs to the Vosges département of France. This commune with a little town in her center, is approximately 50 km (31 mi) northeast of Épinal, and connected by two roads, south through the passes of Haut-Jacques and Bruyères or north by the pass of Haut-du-Bois and the ancient land of Rambervillers. By rail, Épinal is 61 km (38 mi) from Saint-Dié. The Saint-Dié-des-Vosges station offers rail connections to Épinal, Strasbourg, Nancy and Paris.

The river Meurthe flows in the Permian basin of Saint-Dié surrounded by wooded mountains Ormont, Kemberg and La Madeleine. The peaks of these mountains are 550 metres (1,800 feet) high, and are composed of Triassic formations, especially the so-called "Vosges sandstone", a kind of red sandstone.

Features edit

The town was nearly completely redesigned and rebuilt in the French Uniform Style after the fire of 1757. A major part was destroyed in November, 1944 and was rebuilt largely in a material imitating red sandstone. Its cathedral has a Gothic nave and choir designed in the 14th century; the portal of red stone was created by Giovanni Betto in the beginning of the 18th century. A cloister, begun in the 14th century but never finished, contains a stone pulpit, and connects with the Petite-Eglise or Notre-Dame-de-Galilée, a well-preserved specimen of Romanesque architecture of the 12th century. All of the monuments were restored or rebuilt in the same manner after 1950.

Since 1880, the Council House"Mairie" has held a marvelous theater, a library with some old and valuable manuscripts, a reading hall and a museum of rocks and antiquities collected by the members of the Vosges Philomatic Society. This society, which engaged in the collection and diffusion of knowledge, was founded in 1875 by Henry Bardy, who was soon an editor of the first local republican paper named La Gazette Vosgiennne. All this center of town was destroyed in November 1944.

After 1948, a new hôtel-de-ville was built 100 metres (330 feet) to the west. At its west side there is now a monument by Merci to Jules Ferry, long ago in an old union place under the Cathedral. Born in the town in 1832, Jules Ferry was a great French politician of the conservative Republic, constitutionally called Third Republic in 1875.

After World War II, the right side of the Meurthe was completely razed and most people lived outside the town in wood cabins for decades. The radical plan created by Le Corbusier in 1945, which called for a large plaza with factories and other buildings in the heart of the city, was rejected in 1947, and only one private factory belonging to Jean-Jacques Duval was ever built. There were no means nor materials in this terrible period and the great street called "rue Thiers" was finished only at the end of 1954.

Economy edit

The town was industrial in nature long before the local economy reaped the benefits from a migration of Alsatians, who arrived after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871. Its industries included the spinning, weaving and bleaching of cotton, wire-drawing, metal-founding, the manufacture of hosiery, woodwork of various kinds (toleware), machinery, iron goods and wire screen. Since the world wars, major industrial activities have declined precipitously. Now the town is primarily a center of public services, educational institutions, a hospital, and businesses in the service industries, such as supermarkets.

History edit

Saint-Dié (Lat. Deodatum, Theodata, S. Deodati Fanum) is named for Saint Deodat. A holy man who was known as "le bonhomme", he founded a ban (a political and Christian subdivision of the royal territory) in the 7th century that was originally called Foresta. Some religious historians believed he was the bishop of Nevers, Deodatus of Nevers. Deodatus gave up his official functions to retire to a desert dwelling. Other sources connect the name, however, with an earlier saint, Deodatus of Blois (d. 525).[3]

Archeological and historical records confirm the total time that this area has been inhabited. One hypothesis holds that a column constructed by Romans on a site originally dedicated to Tiwaz – Tius, god of war – might explain ancient ceremonies in the old Saint-Dié chapel at the foot of Kemberg mountain (locally called Saint-Martin). Deodatus, who could have been an episcopus hiberniensis (bishop from Ireland) or an episcopus niverniensis (bishop from Nevers), would have lived in an old monastery or vieux moutier above the old chapel and a water source.

Legends originating in the 11th century as well as popular traditions say that Saint Deodatus himself dreamed of a new monastery to be built upon a little hill called la monticule des Jointures, visible on the other side of the river. A little monastic community dedicated to Saint Maurice was probably founded during Carolingian times, as there is evidence of its presence there since the 10th century. After 1006, the monastery took the name Saint-Dié. The little monastery was partially destroyed by fire in 1065 and again in 1155.

The date on which the site became a chapter of canons is uncertain. Historians deny that Brunon de Dabo-Egisheim, future Pope Leo IX, was a young monk and great provost here, but his family did play a great role in the elevated status of this religious place, giving their coat of arms to it after the First Crusades. Canons who subsequently held the rank of provost or dean came from very rich and noble families, among them Giovanni de Medici and several princes of the ducal House of Lorraine. Among the extensive privileges enjoyed by them was the coining of money; the Duchy of Lorraine was the last to hold this privilege, in 1601.

Though they co-operated in building the town walls in 1290, the canons and the dukes of Lorraine soon became rivals for the authority over Saint-Dié. The institution of a town council in 1628 which appropriated part of their temporal jurisdiction, in addition to numerous French occupations, diminished the financial influence of the canons. During the Stanislas reign and after the Lorraine annexation in 1776, the establishment in 1777 of a bishopric condemned the venerable institution, with the first bishop Monseigneur de Chaumont. With the French Revolution all the religious people were completely swept away.

The town was repeatedly sacked during the wars of the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries. The little but religiously very prestigious town was partially destroyed by fire in 1554 and 1757. Funds for the rebuilding of the portion of the town destroyed by the last fire were supplied by Stanislas, last duke of Lorraine.

Ecclesiastical history edit

The diocese of Saint-Dié was created in 1777, but suppressed by the Concordat of 1801. It was restored in 1822 as a suffragan of the Diocese of Besançon covering the department of the Vosges, of which 18 parishes were transferred to the Diocese of Strasbourg in 1871.

The diocese of Saint-Dié originated in the celebrated abbey, initially named "Galilée", and was established by Saint Deodatus (Dié) in the 7th century, around which the town of Saint-Dié grew up. The Benedictines of the original foundation Saint Maurice were replaced in 996 by Augustinian Canons.

During the sixteenth century, and the long vacancy of the see of Toul, the abbots of the several monasteries in the Vosges, without actually declaring themselves independent of the diocese of Toul, claimed to exercise a quasi-episcopal jurisdiction. In 1718, the Bishop of Toul requested the creation of a see at Saint-Dié, but the suggestion was opposed by the King of France. The see was eventually created by Pope Pius VI in 1777 by the elevation of the abbey of Saint-Dié into a bishopric. The new diocese was removed from the diocese of Toul and made instead a suffragan of the German Archdiocese of Trier.

The Reformed Church building in Saint-Dié contains six stained windows, depicting the first six days of Creation, designed by the Swiss artist Annie Vallotton,[4] whose brother was the minister there.[5]

Population edit

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1968 25,117—    
1975 25,423+0.17%
1982 23,759−0.96%
1990 22,635−0.60%
1999 22,569−0.03%
2007 21,882−0.39%
2012 21,053−0.77%
2017 19,607−1.41%
Source: INSEE[6]

Cosmography edit

Vautrin Lud, Canon of St-Dié in charge of the mines of the valleys was the chaplain and secretary of René II, Duke of Lorraine. He set up a printing-establishment at St-Dié and facilitated reflections on the theme of Earth representation and also met with what would today be called geographers, the German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller, and the Alsatian professor Matthias Ringmann and clever Canons.

The team began at once to produce an edition of a Latin translation of Ptolemy's "Geography". In 1507, René II received the Soderini Letter from Lisbon, an abridged account of the four voyages of Amerigo Vespucci. Canon Lud had this translated into Latin by Basin de Sandaucourt. The translation dedicated to the Emperor Maximilian was completed at St-Dié on 24 April 1507; it was prefaced by a short explanatory booklet, entitled Cosmographiae Introductio, certainly the work of Waldseemüller, an introduction to cosmography that can be seen as the baptismal certificate of the New Continent. Indeed, Waldseemüller and the scholars of the Gymnasium Vosagense then made a capital decision writing: "...And since Europe and Asia received names of women, I do not see any reason not to call this latest discovery Amerige, or America, according to the sagacious man who discovered it".

The first and second printings appeared in August 1507 at St-Dié, a third at Strassburg in 1509, and thus the name of America was spread about. Thus, Saint-Dié-des-Vosges is honored today with the title of "godmother of America", the city that named America. The work was re-edited with an English version by Charles Herbermann (New York, 1907). Gallois proved that in 1507, Waldseemüller inserted this name in two maps, but that in 1513, in other maps Waldseemüller, being better informed, inserted the name of Columbus as the discoverer of America. But it was too late; the name of America had been already firmly established.

In 1507, Martin Waldseemüller produced in St-Dié also a world globe bearing the first use of the name "America".

 
Jacques Augustin (Self-portrait)

Born, educated or lived in Saint-Dié edit

  • Jean Fredel, captain of the Duke of Lorraine, Charles II
  • Claude Bausmont, "châtelain" and "cellerier" of Saint-Dié (1430–1477).
  • Vautrin Lud (1448–1527), canon, master of the brotherhood of Saint Sébastien, and hypothetical creator of the Gymnasium Vosagense in the year 1507.
  • Mechtilde of the Blessed Sacrament, institutor of the order, "Bénédictines de l'adoration perpétuelle" (born Catherine Barre in 1619, died in Paris in 1698)
  • Jacques Augustin (1759–1832), miniaturist painter born in St-Dié
  • Dieudonné Dubois (1759–1803), lawyer and member of Conseil des Cinq-Cents in the revolutionary year IV and conseil d'État in year VIII.
  • Nicolas Souhait (1773–1799), colonel du génie born in Saint-Dié
  • Nicolas Philippe Guye (1773–1845), general and mayor of Saint-Dié in 1829
  • Antonio de Sedella, Catholic missionary in Canada born in Saint-Dié
  • Léon Carrière (1814–1877), physician, father of Paul Carrière, the forestry restorer in the south Alps.
  • Jean-Romary Grosjean (1815–1888), musicologist and cathedral organist, who first published "Il est né, le divin Enfant" (the well-known traditional French Christmas carol) <New Oxford Book of Carols, p. 631> in 1862.
  • Henry Bardy (1829–1909), pharmacist, president-founder of the Société Philomatique Vosgienne.
  • Emile Erckmann, writer who lived in the château de l'Hermitage between 1870 and 1880.
  • Jules Ferry (1832–1893), lawyer and politician, born in Saint-Dié.
  • Henri Rovel (1849–1926), painter and meteorologist born and dead in Saint-Dié
  • Paul Descelles (1851–1915), painter
  • Victor Franck (1852–1907), photographer born in Saint-Dié.
  • Ferdinand Brunot (1860–1938), grammatician (linguistics) born in Saint-Dié.
  • Léon Julien Griache (1861–1914), général de brigade d’artillerie born in Saint-Dié
  • Fernand Baldensperger (1871–1958), academic (literature)
  • Brothers Grollemund, polytechnicians and généraux de brigade: Marie-Joseph (1875–1954) and Marie-Paul Vincent (1879–1953)
  • Victor-Charles Antoine (1881–1959), sculptor and engraver born in Saint-Dié
  • Albert Ohl des Marais, engraver and historian
  • Georges Baumont (1885–1974), professor of literature, librarian and local historian
  • Yvan Goll (1891–1950), poet and novelist, born in Saint-Dié
  • Jacques Brenner (1922–2001), writer and critic born in saint-Dié.
  • Emmanuel Clément-Demange (born 1970 in saint-Dié), French former professional footballer
  • Kalidou Koulibaly, athlete born in Saint-Die

Higher education edit

 
Institut Universitaire de Technologique

University Institute of Technology: IUT (Institut universitaire de technologie)

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Saint-Dié-des-Vosges is twinned with:[7]

See also edit

References edit

Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "St Dié". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 1021.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  1. ^ "Répertoire national des élus: les maires" (in French). data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises. 13 September 2022.
  2. ^ "Populations légales 2021". The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. 28 December 2023.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-02-06. Retrieved 2012-03-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ "Le temple de l'Eglise réformée à #Saint-Dié-des-Vosges #88 #88100". www.petit-patrimoine.com. Retrieved 2023-10-18.
  5. ^ "The Bible illustration blog: Guest Bible Artist interview #5". The Bible illustration blog. 2008-09-18. Retrieved 2023-10-18.
  6. ^ Population en historique depuis 1968, INSEE
  7. ^ "Saint-Dié-des-Vosges, une ville ouverte sur le monde". saint-die.eu (in French). Saint-Dié-des-Vosges. Retrieved 2023-01-15.

External links edit

  • University Institute of Technology website
  • The Cosmographiæ Introductio of Martin Waldseemüller (Facsimile), via Google Books.
  • Joseph Fischer (1913). "Martin Waldseemüller" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • "16th-Century Mapmaker's Intriguing Knowledge", David Brown, The Washington Post. November 17, 2008; Page A07.
  • "You Are Here—The Library of Congress buys 'America's birth certificate'.", John J. Miller, The Wall Street Journal. July 25, 2003.
  • "The map that changed the world", Toby Lester The BBC, October 28, 2009.
  • "Waldseemüller, Martin" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. 1900.

saint, dié, vosges, french, pronunciation, voʒ, german, sankt, didel, commonly, referred, just, saint, dié, commune, vosges, department, grand, northeastern, france, subprefecture, communecathedralcoat, armslocation, show, franceshow, grand, estcoordinates, 95. Saint Die des Vosges French pronunciation sɛ dje de voʒ German Sankt Didel commonly referred to as just Saint Die is a commune in the Vosges department Grand Est northeastern France Saint Die des VosgesSubprefecture and communeCathedralCoat of armsLocation of Saint Die des VosgesSaint Die des VosgesShow map of FranceSaint Die des VosgesShow map of Grand EstCoordinates 48 17 N 6 57 E 48 28 N 6 95 E 48 28 6 95CountryFranceRegionGrand EstDepartmentVosgesArrondissementSaint Die des VosgesCantonSaint Die des Vosges 1 and 2IntercommunalityCA Saint Die des VosgesGovernment Mayor 2022 2026 Bruno Toussaint 1 Area146 15 km2 17 82 sq mi Population 2021 2 19 319 Density420 km2 1 100 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST INSEE Postal code88413 88100Elevation310 901 m 1 017 2 956 ft avg 343 m or 1 125 ft 1 French Land Register data which excludes lakes ponds glaciers gt 1 km2 0 386 sq mi or 247 acres and river estuaries It is a sub prefecture of the department Contents 1 Geography 2 Features 3 Economy 4 History 5 Ecclesiastical history 6 Population 7 Cosmography 8 Born educated or lived in Saint Die 9 Higher education 10 Twin towns sister cities 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksGeography edit nbsp The city located in the Vosges mountains Saint Die is located in the Vosges Mountains 80 km 50 mi southeast of Nancy and 80 km 50 mi southwest of Strasbourg This route in the valley of the river Meurthe was always the more frequented and first to get a rail line in 1864 so now it accommodates the primary road Saint Die des Vosges principal town of an arrondissement of the same name belongs to the Vosges departement of France This commune with a little town in her center is approximately 50 km 31 mi northeast of Epinal and connected by two roads south through the passes of Haut Jacques and Bruyeres or north by the pass of Haut du Bois and the ancient land of Rambervillers By rail Epinal is 61 km 38 mi from Saint Die The Saint Die des Vosges station offers rail connections to Epinal Strasbourg Nancy and Paris The river Meurthe flows in the Permian basin of Saint Die surrounded by wooded mountains Ormont Kemberg and La Madeleine The peaks of these mountains are 550 metres 1 800 feet high and are composed of Triassic formations especially the so called Vosges sandstone a kind of red sandstone Features editThe town was nearly completely redesigned and rebuilt in the French Uniform Style after the fire of 1757 A major part was destroyed in November 1944 and was rebuilt largely in a material imitating red sandstone Its cathedral has a Gothic nave and choir designed in the 14th century the portal of red stone was created by Giovanni Betto in the beginning of the 18th century A cloister begun in the 14th century but never finished contains a stone pulpit and connects with the Petite Eglise or Notre Dame de Galilee a well preserved specimen of Romanesque architecture of the 12th century All of the monuments were restored or rebuilt in the same manner after 1950 Since 1880 the Council House Mairie has held a marvelous theater a library with some old and valuable manuscripts a reading hall and a museum of rocks and antiquities collected by the members of the Vosges Philomatic Society This society which engaged in the collection and diffusion of knowledge was founded in 1875 by Henry Bardy who was soon an editor of the first local republican paper named La Gazette Vosgiennne All this center of town was destroyed in November 1944 After 1948 a new hotel de ville was built 100 metres 330 feet to the west At its west side there is now a monument by Merci to Jules Ferry long ago in an old union place under the Cathedral Born in the town in 1832 Jules Ferry was a great French politician of the conservative Republic constitutionally called Third Republic in 1875 After World War II the right side of the Meurthe was completely razed and most people lived outside the town in wood cabins for decades The radical plan created by Le Corbusier in 1945 which called for a large plaza with factories and other buildings in the heart of the city was rejected in 1947 and only one private factory belonging to Jean Jacques Duval was ever built There were no means nor materials in this terrible period and the great street called rue Thiers was finished only at the end of 1954 Economy editThe town was industrial in nature long before the local economy reaped the benefits from a migration of Alsatians who arrived after the Franco Prussian War of 1870 1871 Its industries included the spinning weaving and bleaching of cotton wire drawing metal founding the manufacture of hosiery woodwork of various kinds toleware machinery iron goods and wire screen Since the world wars major industrial activities have declined precipitously Now the town is primarily a center of public services educational institutions a hospital and businesses in the service industries such as supermarkets History editSaint Die Lat Deodatum Theodata S Deodati Fanum is named for Saint Deodat A holy man who was known as le bonhomme he founded a ban a political and Christian subdivision of the royal territory in the 7th century that was originally called Foresta Some religious historians believed he was the bishop of Nevers Deodatus of Nevers Deodatus gave up his official functions to retire to a desert dwelling Other sources connect the name however with an earlier saint Deodatus of Blois d 525 3 Archeological and historical records confirm the total time that this area has been inhabited One hypothesis holds that a column constructed by Romans on a site originally dedicated to Tiwaz Tius god of war might explain ancient ceremonies in the old Saint Die chapel at the foot of Kemberg mountain locally called Saint Martin Deodatus who could have been an episcopus hiberniensis bishop from Ireland or an episcopus niverniensis bishop from Nevers would have lived in an old monastery or vieux moutier above the old chapel and a water source Legends originating in the 11th century as well as popular traditions say that Saint Deodatus himself dreamed of a new monastery to be built upon a little hill called la monticule des Jointures visible on the other side of the river A little monastic community dedicated to Saint Maurice was probably founded during Carolingian times as there is evidence of its presence there since the 10th century After 1006 the monastery took the name Saint Die The little monastery was partially destroyed by fire in 1065 and again in 1155 The date on which the site became a chapter of canons is uncertain Historians deny that Brunon de Dabo Egisheim future Pope Leo IX was a young monk and great provost here but his family did play a great role in the elevated status of this religious place giving their coat of arms to it after the First Crusades Canons who subsequently held the rank of provost or dean came from very rich and noble families among them Giovanni de Medici and several princes of the ducal House of Lorraine Among the extensive privileges enjoyed by them was the coining of money the Duchy of Lorraine was the last to hold this privilege in 1601 Though they co operated in building the town walls in 1290 the canons and the dukes of Lorraine soon became rivals for the authority over Saint Die The institution of a town council in 1628 which appropriated part of their temporal jurisdiction in addition to numerous French occupations diminished the financial influence of the canons During the Stanislas reign and after the Lorraine annexation in 1776 the establishment in 1777 of a bishopric condemned the venerable institution with the first bishop Monseigneur de Chaumont With the French Revolution all the religious people were completely swept away The town was repeatedly sacked during the wars of the 15th 16th and 17th centuries The little but religiously very prestigious town was partially destroyed by fire in 1554 and 1757 Funds for the rebuilding of the portion of the town destroyed by the last fire were supplied by Stanislas last duke of Lorraine Ecclesiastical history editMain article Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint Die The diocese of Saint Die was created in 1777 but suppressed by the Concordat of 1801 It was restored in 1822 as a suffragan of the Diocese of Besancon covering the department of the Vosges of which 18 parishes were transferred to the Diocese of Strasbourg in 1871 The diocese of Saint Die originated in the celebrated abbey initially named Galilee and was established by Saint Deodatus Die in the 7th century around which the town of Saint Die grew up The Benedictines of the original foundation Saint Maurice were replaced in 996 by Augustinian Canons During the sixteenth century and the long vacancy of the see of Toul the abbots of the several monasteries in the Vosges without actually declaring themselves independent of the diocese of Toul claimed to exercise a quasi episcopal jurisdiction In 1718 the Bishop of Toul requested the creation of a see at Saint Die but the suggestion was opposed by the King of France The see was eventually created by Pope Pius VI in 1777 by the elevation of the abbey of Saint Die into a bishopric The new diocese was removed from the diocese of Toul and made instead a suffragan of the German Archdiocese of Trier The Reformed Church building in Saint Die contains six stained windows depicting the first six days of Creation designed by the Swiss artist Annie Vallotton 4 whose brother was the minister there 5 Population editGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Historical populationYearPop p a 196825 117 197525 423 0 17 198223 759 0 96 199022 635 0 60 199922 569 0 03 200721 882 0 39 201221 053 0 77 201719 607 1 41 Source INSEE 6 Cosmography editMain article Naming of the Americas Vautrin Lud Canon of St Die in charge of the mines of the valleys was the chaplain and secretary of Rene II Duke of Lorraine He set up a printing establishment at St Die and facilitated reflections on the theme of Earth representation and also met with what would today be called geographers the German cartographer Martin Waldseemuller and the Alsatian professor Matthias Ringmann and clever Canons The team began at once to produce an edition of a Latin translation of Ptolemy s Geography In 1507 Rene II received the Soderini Letter from Lisbon an abridged account of the four voyages of Amerigo Vespucci Canon Lud had this translated into Latin by Basin de Sandaucourt The translation dedicated to the Emperor Maximilian was completed at St Die on 24 April 1507 it was prefaced by a short explanatory booklet entitled Cosmographiae Introductio certainly the work of Waldseemuller an introduction to cosmography that can be seen as the baptismal certificate of the New Continent Indeed Waldseemuller and the scholars of the Gymnasium Vosagense then made a capital decision writing And since Europe and Asia received names of women I do not see any reason not to call this latest discovery Amerige or America according to the sagacious man who discovered it The first and second printings appeared in August 1507 at St Die a third at Strassburg in 1509 and thus the name of America was spread about Thus Saint Die des Vosges is honored today with the title of godmother of America the city that named America The work was re edited with an English version by Charles Herbermann New York 1907 Gallois proved that in 1507 Waldseemuller inserted this name in two maps but that in 1513 in other maps Waldseemuller being better informed inserted the name of Columbus as the discoverer of America But it was too late the name of America had been already firmly established In 1507 Martin Waldseemuller produced in St Die also a world globe bearing the first use of the name America nbsp Jacques Augustin Self portrait Born educated or lived in Saint Die editJean Fredel captain of the Duke of Lorraine Charles II Claude Bausmont chatelain and cellerier of Saint Die 1430 1477 Vautrin Lud 1448 1527 canon master of the brotherhood of Saint Sebastien and hypothetical creator of the Gymnasium Vosagense in the year 1507 Mechtilde of the Blessed Sacrament institutor of the order Benedictines de l adoration perpetuelle born Catherine Barre in 1619 died in Paris in 1698 Jacques Augustin 1759 1832 miniaturist painter born in St Die Dieudonne Dubois 1759 1803 lawyer and member of Conseil des Cinq Cents in the revolutionary year IV and conseil d Etat in year VIII Nicolas Souhait 1773 1799 colonel du genie born in Saint Die Nicolas Philippe Guye 1773 1845 general and mayor of Saint Die in 1829 Antonio de Sedella Catholic missionary in Canada born in Saint Die Leon Carriere 1814 1877 physician father of Paul Carriere the forestry restorer in the south Alps Jean Romary Grosjean 1815 1888 musicologist and cathedral organist who first published Il est ne le divin Enfant the well known traditional French Christmas carol lt New Oxford Book of Carols p 631 gt in 1862 Henry Bardy 1829 1909 pharmacist president founder of the Societe Philomatique Vosgienne Emile Erckmann writer who lived in the chateau de l Hermitage between 1870 and 1880 Jules Ferry 1832 1893 lawyer and politician born in Saint Die Henri Rovel 1849 1926 painter and meteorologist born and dead in Saint Die Paul Descelles 1851 1915 painter Victor Franck 1852 1907 photographer born in Saint Die Ferdinand Brunot 1860 1938 grammatician linguistics born in Saint Die Leon Julien Griache 1861 1914 general de brigade d artillerie born in Saint Die Fernand Baldensperger 1871 1958 academic literature Brothers Grollemund polytechnicians and generaux de brigade Marie Joseph 1875 1954 and Marie Paul Vincent 1879 1953 Victor Charles Antoine 1881 1959 sculptor and engraver born in Saint Die Albert Ohl des Marais engraver and historian Georges Baumont 1885 1974 professor of literature librarian and local historian Yvan Goll 1891 1950 poet and novelist born in Saint Die Jacques Brenner 1922 2001 writer and critic born in saint Die Emmanuel Clement Demange born 1970 in saint Die French former professional footballer Kalidou Koulibaly athlete born in Saint DieHigher education edit nbsp Institut Universitaire de TechnologiqueUniversity Institute of Technology IUT Institut universitaire de technologie Robotics Electronics Computing Internet Graphic design CommunicationTwin towns sister cities editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in France Saint Die des Vosges is twinned with 7 nbsp Arlon Belgium 1962 nbsp Cattolica Italy 1997 nbsp Crikvenica Croatia 2006 nbsp Friedrichshafen Germany 1973 nbsp Lorraine Quebec Canada 1990 nbsp Lowell United States 1989 nbsp Meckhe Senegal 1991 nbsp Zakopane Poland 1990 See also editCommunes of the Vosges departmentReferences editAttribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 St Die Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 1021 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Repertoire national des elus les maires in French data gouv fr Plateforme ouverte des donnees publiques francaises 13 September 2022 Populations legales 2021 The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies 28 December 2023 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2007 02 06 Retrieved 2012 03 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Le temple de l Eglise reformee a Saint Die des Vosges 88 88100 www petit patrimoine com Retrieved 2023 10 18 The Bible illustration blog Guest Bible Artist interview 5 The Bible illustration blog 2008 09 18 Retrieved 2023 10 18 Population en historique depuis 1968 INSEE Saint Die des Vosges une ville ouverte sur le monde saint die eu in French Saint Die des Vosges Retrieved 2023 01 15 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Die des Vosges City council website University Institute of Technology website The Cosmographiae Introductio of Martin Waldseemuller Facsimile via Google Books Joseph Fischer 1913 Martin Waldseemuller In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company 16th Century Mapmaker s Intriguing Knowledge David Brown The Washington Post November 17 2008 Page A07 You Are Here The Library of Congress buys America s birth certificate John J Miller The Wall Street Journal July 25 2003 The map that changed the world Toby Lester The BBC October 28 2009 Waldseemuller Martin Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint Die des Vosges amp oldid 1191227759, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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