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Var (department)

Var (French: [vaʁ] , Occitan: [ˈbaɾ]) is a department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in Southeastern France. It is bordered on the east by the Alpes-Maritimes department; to the west by Bouches-du-Rhône; to the north of the river Verdon by the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department; and to the south by the Mediterranean Sea. It had a population of 1,076,711 in 2019.[3]

Var
From top down, left to right: Massif de l'Esterel, Fréjus, Draguignan and Porquerolles
Location of Var in France
Coordinates: 43°30′N 06°20′E / 43.500°N 6.333°E / 43.500; 6.333
CountryFrance
RegionProvence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
PrefectureToulon
SubprefecturesBrignoles
Draguignan
Government
 • President of the Departmental CouncilJean-Louis Masson[1] (LR)
Area
 • Total5,973 km2 (2,306 sq mi)
Population
 (Jan. 2021)[2]
 • Total1,095,337
 • Rank22nd
 • Density180/km2 (470/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Department number83
Arrondissements3
Cantons43
Communes153
^1 French Land Register data, which exclude estuaries and lakes, ponds and glaciers larger than 1 km2

The Var department takes its name from the river Var, which flowed along its eastern boundary, until the boundary was moved in 1860 and the department is no longer associated with the river.

Toulon is Var's largest city and administrative capital, known as the prefecture. Other important towns in Var include Fréjus, Saint-Raphaël, Draguignan, Brignoles, Hyères and La Seyne-sur-Mer. Var is known for the harbour of Toulon, the main port of the French Navy, for its seaside resorts, the most famous of which is Saint-Tropez, for some fine examples of Romanesque and other medieval architecture, such as Le Thoronet Abbey and the Fréjus Cathedral, for its wines, particularly the wines of Bandol, as well as for its motorsport race track Circuit Paul Ricard, located in Le Castellet.

History edit

Early years edit

The department of Var was created at the time of the French Revolution, on 4 March 1790, from a portion of the former royal province of Provence.

 
Toulon, the historical capital city of Var, was returned that title in 1974.
 
Napoleon arriving in Fréjus, 1799

Its capital was originally Toulon, but this was moved to Grasse in 1793 to punish the Toulonnais for yielding the town to the British in 1793. Subsequently, the capital was moved to Brignoles in 1795, then to Draguignan in 1797. It was not returned to Toulon until 1974.

19th century edit

In 1815, following the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo the department was occupied by Austrian troops until November 1818. In 1854 the first railroad reached Toulon.

With the creation of the new department of Alpes-Maritimes in 1860 and following the annexation by France of Nice, the eastern part of the department, corresponding to the arrondissement of Grasse, was moved to the new department. This move also shifted the river Var, which had given the department its name, to the new department.

In 1884 a cholera epidemic struck Toulon. The leader of the fight against the epidemic was Georges Clemenceau, a doctor and a member of the National Assembly for the Seine department. He was later elected a member of the Chamber of Deputies for the Var department from 1888 to 1893 and Senator from 1902 to 1920, during which time he also served as Prime Minister of France.

Recent times edit

The First World War (1914–1918) stimulated growth in shipyards and military industries in the region, but weakened the agricultural and food industries. In 1942 the German Army moved from Occupied France into the zone libre, which included the Var department. The French Fleet was sabotaged in Toulon Harbour to keep it from falling into German hands. The Maquis Vallier, a group of maquis resistance fighters, was active. On 15 August 1944 American and Free French forces land at Saint-Tropez, Sainte-Maxime and Saint-Raphaël. The Free French fleet arrived at Toulon on 13 September.

In the 1960s about 100,000 French citizens were repatriated from Algeria following the Algerian War of Independence and settled in the Var department. In 2014, Fréjus Mayor David Rachline became the first Senator from Var elected under the National Front (later National Rally) banner; alongside Stéphane Ravier from neighbouring Bouches-du-Rhône, the two became the first National Front members of the Senate under the Fifth Republic.

Geography edit

The Var department has a surface area of 6,032 km2. It had 420 km of coastline, including the offshore islands. 56% of its surface area is covered with forest. Its geological formations are divided into two regions; one composed of limestone to the northwest of a line between Toulon and Draguignan and of crystalline rock (quartz) to the southeast.

The department is in the foothills of the French Alps and largely mountainous. Major mountains include:

  • The Massif des Maures (771 m) and Massif de l'Esterel, along the coast, (618 m) are made of quartz rock.
  • The Sainte-Baume mountain ridge (1,147 m), in the west.
  • Mountain of Lachens (1,715 m), in the northwest of the department, and the highest point in the Var.

The plateau of Canjuers (French: Plan de Canjuers) in the northeast of Var gradually rises from 500 to 1,000 metres. In the south and west there are several plateaus, such as the plateau of Siou Blanc to the north of Toulon, which rise from 400 to 700 metres in altitude.

Climate edit

 
Verdon Gorge
 
Îles d'Hyères

The department of Var has a Mediterranean climate, slightly warmer, drier and sunnier than Nice and the Alpes-Maritimes, but is also less sheltered from the wind. Toulon has an average of 2899.3 hours of sunshine each year.[4] The average maximum daily temperature in August is 29.1 °C, and the average daily minimum temperature in January is 5.8 °C.[4] The average annual rainfall is 665 mm.[4] Winds exceeding 16 m/s (57.6 km/h) blow an average of 116 days per year in Toulon,[4] compared with 77 days per year at Fréjus further east.[5]

Demographics edit

Population development since 1801:

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1801271,703—    
1821305,096+0.58%
1831321,686+0.53%
1841328,010+0.19%
1851357,967+0.88%
1861315,526−1.25%
1872293,757−0.65%
1881288,577−0.20%
1891288,336−0.01%
1901326,384+1.25%
1911330,755+0.13%
1921322,945−0.24%
1931377,104+1.56%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1936398,662+1.12%
1946370,688−0.72%
1954413,012+1.36%
1962469,557+1.62%
1968555,926+2.85%
1975626,093+1.71%
1982708,331+1.78%
1990815,714+1.78%
1999898,441+1.08%
2006985,099+1.32%
20111,012,735+0.55%
20161,055,821+0.84%
20201,085,189+0.69%
Figures before 1861 refer to the old department of Var. Sources:[6][7]

Principal towns edit

In 2019, the population of Var was 1,076,711, of whom 51% live in the agglomeration (urban unit) of Toulon, the prefecture and most populous commune.[8] As of 2019, there are nine communes with more than 20,000 inhabitants:[3]

Commune Population (2019)
Toulon 179,659
La Seyne-sur-Mer 62,232
Fréjus 55,750
Hyères 54,615
Draguignan 39,433
Saint-Raphaël 36,027
Six-Fours-les-Plages 34,592
La Garde 25,505
La Valette-du-Var 24,087
† part of the Toulon agglomeration

Politics edit

In the 2017 French presidential election, Marine Le Pen of the National Front won a majority of the vote in Var in the first round, with François Fillon of The Republicans placing second. Emmanuel Macron of En Marche! won a majority in the second round.

In the 2022 French presidential election, Le Pen of the National Rally (formerly National Front) won a majority in Var in both rounds.

Departmental Council of Var edit

The Departmental Council of Var comprises 46 seats. In the 2021 departmental election, 26 seats were won by The Republicans (LR), 13 by miscellaneous right candidates, 3 by the Union of Democrats and Independents (UDI), 2 by the National Rally (RN) and 2 by miscellaneous centre candidates. Var currently has no left-wing departmental councillors.

Since 2022, La Garde Mayor Jean-Louis Masson (LR) has been President of the Departmental Council of Var. His governing majority comprises all councillors except the two elected under the National Rally banner, who form the opposition.

Representation in Paris edit

Members of the National Assembly edit

In the 2017 legislative election, Var elected the following representatives to the National Assembly:

In the 2022 legislative election, Var elected the following representatives to the National Assembly:

Members of the Senate edit

In the 2020 Senate election, Jean Bacci, Michel Bonnus, Françoise Dumont and André Guiol were elected from Var. All sit with the Senate Republicans group, except Guiol who sits with the European Democratic and Social Rally group.

Economy edit

The principal industry of Var is tourism, thanks largely to the big summer influx of tourists to the South of France and the Mediterranean coast in particular, but also inland to the Verdon River Canyon and hilltop villages and vineyards.

Tourism edit

 
Bormes-les-Mimosas
 
Cascade de Sillans
 
Saint-Tropez

Popular tourist attractions in Var include:

Industry edit

The construction industry employs 28,000 workers in the Var of which 4,000 work alone and 4,500 companies employ the remaining 24,000 salaried workers. Industry generates an annual turnover of €2.5 billion. Of this, €500 million is derived from public works.[10]

Agriculture edit

800 km2 or 13% of the total area is dedicated to agriculture, on which 40,000 people (14% of the Var working population) depend for their livelihoods. The department also has 10 km2 of horticultural land (of which 4 km2 are covered). Var is France's largest grower of cut flowers, producing some 500 million stems a year. Livestock farming is mainly sheep (50,000) and goats (4,200). Vines and viticultural related activities account for 345 km2 of farmland. The 450 domaines or coopératives and the 4 AOCs (appellation d'origine contrôlée) produce 150 million litres of wine a year. Var leads the world in the production of rose wine.

Other important agricultural products include olives (cultivated on 42 km2 of land—a quarter of all French olive groves—and processed in 40 mills), figs (the Var produces 80% of France's figs), and honey (800 tonnes per year). There are also 9 km2 of market gardens.

Agricultural turnover in Var is 610 million per year, of which 45% is sales of wines and 42% of horticultural products.[11]

In 2008 the Var department received approximately €15 million in farm subsidies under the EU Common Agriculture Policy, an average of about €6,000 per recipient farm. This compares with an average across France as a whole of over €18,000 per farm.[12]

Viticulture edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Répertoire national des élus: les conseillers départementaux". data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises (in French). 4 May 2022.
  2. ^ "Téléchargement du fichier d'ensemble des populations légales en 2021". The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. 28 December 2023.
  3. ^ a b Populations légales 2019: 83 Var, INSEE
  4. ^ a b c d "Normales et records météorologiques - Infoclimat". www.infoclimat.fr. Retrieved 2023-11-06.
  5. ^ "Normales et records météorologiques - Infoclimat". www.infoclimat.fr. Retrieved 2023-11-06.
  6. ^ "Historique du Var". Le SPLAF.
  7. ^ "Évolution et structure de la population en 2016". INSEE.
  8. ^ Comparateur de territoires, INSEE. Urban unit of Toulon corrected for Ceyreste and La Ciotat, that are in Bouches-du-Rhône.
  9. ^ Nationale, Assemblée. "Assemblée nationale ~ Les députés, le vote de la loi, le Parlement français". Assemblée nationale.
  10. ^ Var Matin. Monday 9 June 2008.
  11. ^ Var Matin and Le Magazin du Conseil général du Var.
  12. ^ farmsubsidy.org.

External links edit

department, other, uses, french, vaʁ, occitan, ˈbaɾ, department, provence, alpes, côte, azur, region, southeastern, france, bordered, east, alpes, maritimes, department, west, bouches, rhône, north, river, verdon, alpes, haute, provence, department, south, med. For other uses see Var Var French vaʁ Occitan ˈbaɾ is a department in the Provence Alpes Cote d Azur region in Southeastern France It is bordered on the east by the Alpes Maritimes department to the west by Bouches du Rhone to the north of the river Verdon by the Alpes de Haute Provence department and to the south by the Mediterranean Sea It had a population of 1 076 711 in 2019 3 VarDepartment of FranceFrom top down left to right Massif de l Esterel Frejus Draguignan and PorquerollesFlagCoat of armsLocation of Var in FranceCoordinates 43 30 N 06 20 E 43 500 N 6 333 E 43 500 6 333CountryFranceRegionProvence Alpes Cote d AzurPrefectureToulonSubprefecturesBrignolesDraguignanGovernment President of the Departmental CouncilJean Louis Masson 1 LR Area1 Total5 973 km2 2 306 sq mi Population Jan 2021 2 Total1 095 337 Rank22nd Density180 km2 470 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Department number83Arrondissements3Cantons43Communes153 1 French Land Register data which exclude estuaries and lakes ponds and glaciers larger than 1 km2The Var department takes its name from the river Var which flowed along its eastern boundary until the boundary was moved in 1860 and the department is no longer associated with the river Toulon is Var s largest city and administrative capital known as the prefecture Other important towns in Var include Frejus Saint Raphael Draguignan Brignoles Hyeres and La Seyne sur Mer Var is known for the harbour of Toulon the main port of the French Navy for its seaside resorts the most famous of which is Saint Tropez for some fine examples of Romanesque and other medieval architecture such as Le Thoronet Abbey and the Frejus Cathedral for its wines particularly the wines of Bandol as well as for its motorsport race track Circuit Paul Ricard located in Le Castellet Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 19th century 1 3 Recent times 2 Geography 3 Climate 4 Demographics 4 1 Principal towns 5 Politics 5 1 Departmental Council of Var 5 2 Representation in Paris 5 2 1 Members of the National Assembly 5 2 2 Members of the Senate 6 Economy 6 1 Tourism 6 2 Industry 6 3 Agriculture 6 3 1 Viticulture 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editSee also French Riviera Early years edit The department of Var was created at the time of the French Revolution on 4 March 1790 from a portion of the former royal province of Provence nbsp Toulon the historical capital city of Var was returned that title in 1974 nbsp Napoleon arriving in Frejus 1799Its capital was originally Toulon but this was moved to Grasse in 1793 to punish the Toulonnais for yielding the town to the British in 1793 Subsequently the capital was moved to Brignoles in 1795 then to Draguignan in 1797 It was not returned to Toulon until 1974 19th century edit In 1815 following the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo the department was occupied by Austrian troops until November 1818 In 1854 the first railroad reached Toulon With the creation of the new department of Alpes Maritimes in 1860 and following the annexation by France of Nice the eastern part of the department corresponding to the arrondissement of Grasse was moved to the new department This move also shifted the river Var which had given the department its name to the new department In 1884 a cholera epidemic struck Toulon The leader of the fight against the epidemic was Georges Clemenceau a doctor and a member of the National Assembly for the Seine department He was later elected a member of the Chamber of Deputies for the Var department from 1888 to 1893 and Senator from 1902 to 1920 during which time he also served as Prime Minister of France Recent times edit The First World War 1914 1918 stimulated growth in shipyards and military industries in the region but weakened the agricultural and food industries In 1942 the German Army moved from Occupied France into the zone libre which included the Var department The French Fleet was sabotaged in Toulon Harbour to keep it from falling into German hands The Maquis Vallier a group of maquis resistance fighters was active On 15 August 1944 American and Free French forces land at Saint Tropez Sainte Maxime and Saint Raphael The Free French fleet arrived at Toulon on 13 September In the 1960s about 100 000 French citizens were repatriated from Algeria following the Algerian War of Independence and settled in the Var department In 2014 Frejus Mayor David Rachline became the first Senator from Var elected under the National Front later National Rally banner alongside Stephane Ravier from neighbouring Bouches du Rhone the two became the first National Front members of the Senate under the Fifth Republic Geography editThe Var department has a surface area of 6 032 km2 It had 420 km of coastline including the offshore islands 56 of its surface area is covered with forest Its geological formations are divided into two regions one composed of limestone to the northwest of a line between Toulon and Draguignan and of crystalline rock quartz to the southeast The department is in the foothills of the French Alps and largely mountainous Major mountains include The Massif des Maures 771 m and Massif de l Esterel along the coast 618 m are made of quartz rock The Sainte Baume mountain ridge 1 147 m in the west Mountain of Lachens 1 715 m in the northwest of the department and the highest point in the Var The plateau of Canjuers French Plan de Canjuers in the northeast of Var gradually rises from 500 to 1 000 metres In the south and west there are several plateaus such as the plateau of Siou Blanc to the north of Toulon which rise from 400 to 700 metres in altitude The Canyon du Verdon the gorges of the Verdon River is a popular place for hikers kayakers and nature lovers The Iles d Hyeres also known as Porquerolles is a group of three islands off Hyeres The islands are named Porquerolles Port Cros and Ile du Levant Together they make up an area of 26 km2 They can be reached by boat from either Hyeres or Toulon Climate edit nbsp Verdon Gorge nbsp Iles d HyeresThe department of Var has a Mediterranean climate slightly warmer drier and sunnier than Nice and the Alpes Maritimes but is also less sheltered from the wind Toulon has an average of 2899 3 hours of sunshine each year 4 The average maximum daily temperature in August is 29 1 C and the average daily minimum temperature in January is 5 8 C 4 The average annual rainfall is 665 mm 4 Winds exceeding 16 m s 57 6 km h blow an average of 116 days per year in Toulon 4 compared with 77 days per year at Frejus further east 5 Demographics editPopulation development since 1801 Historical populationYearPop p a 1801271 703 1821305 096 0 58 1831321 686 0 53 1841328 010 0 19 1851357 967 0 88 1861315 526 1 25 1872293 757 0 65 1881288 577 0 20 1891288 336 0 01 1901326 384 1 25 1911330 755 0 13 1921322 945 0 24 1931377 104 1 56 YearPop p a 1936398 662 1 12 1946370 688 0 72 1954413 012 1 36 1962469 557 1 62 1968555 926 2 85 1975626 093 1 71 1982708 331 1 78 1990815 714 1 78 1999898 441 1 08 2006985 099 1 32 20111 012 735 0 55 20161 055 821 0 84 20201 085 189 0 69 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Figures before 1861 refer to the old department of Var Sources 6 7 Principal towns edit In 2019 the population of Var was 1 076 711 of whom 51 live in the agglomeration urban unit of Toulon the prefecture and most populous commune 8 As of 2019 there are nine communes with more than 20 000 inhabitants 3 Commune Population 2019 Toulon 179 659La Seyne sur Mer 62 232Frejus 55 750Hyeres 54 615Draguignan 39 433Saint Raphael 36 027Six Fours les Plages 34 592La Garde 25 505La Valette du Var 24 087 part of the Toulon agglomerationPolitics editIn the 2017 French presidential election Marine Le Pen of the National Front won a majority of the vote in Var in the first round with Francois Fillon of The Republicans placing second Emmanuel Macron of En Marche won a majority in the second round In the 2022 French presidential election Le Pen of the National Rally formerly National Front won a majority in Var in both rounds Departmental Council of Var edit The Departmental Council of Var comprises 46 seats In the 2021 departmental election 26 seats were won by The Republicans LR 13 by miscellaneous right candidates 3 by the Union of Democrats and Independents UDI 2 by the National Rally RN and 2 by miscellaneous centre candidates Var currently has no left wing departmental councillors Since 2022 La Garde Mayor Jean Louis Masson LR has been President of the Departmental Council of Var His governing majority comprises all councillors except the two elected under the National Rally banner who form the opposition Representation in Paris edit Members of the National Assembly edit In the 2017 legislative election Var elected the following representatives to the National Assembly Constituency Member 9 PartyVar s 1st constituency Genevieve Levy The RepublicansVar s 2nd constituency Valerie Lacroute La Republique En Marche Var s 3rd constituency Jean Louis Masson The RepublicansVar s 4th constituency Sereine Mauborgne La Republique En Marche Var s 5th constituency Philippe Michel Kleisbauer Democratic MovementVar s 6th constituency Valerie Gomez Bassac La Republique En Marche Var s 7th constituency Emilie Guerel La Republique En Marche Var s 8th constituency Fabien Matras La Republique En Marche In the 2022 legislative election Var elected the following representatives to the National Assembly Constituency Member PartyVar s 1st constituency Yannick Chenevard La Republique En Marche Var s 2nd constituency Laure Lavalette National RallyVar s 3rd constituency Stephane Rambaud National RallyVar s 4th constituency Philippe Lottiaux National RallyVar s 5th constituency Julie Lechanteux National RallyVar s 6th constituency Frank Giletti National RallyVar s 7th constituency Frederic Boccaletti National RallyVar s 8th constituency Philippe Schrek National RallyMembers of the Senate edit In the 2020 Senate election Jean Bacci Michel Bonnus Francoise Dumont and Andre Guiol were elected from Var All sit with the Senate Republicans group except Guiol who sits with the European Democratic and Social Rally group Economy editThe principal industry of Var is tourism thanks largely to the big summer influx of tourists to the South of France and the Mediterranean coast in particular but also inland to the Verdon River Canyon and hilltop villages and vineyards Tourism edit nbsp Bormes les Mimosas nbsp Cascade de Sillans nbsp Saint TropezPopular tourist attractions in Var include The port and beaches of Saint Tropez The seaside village of Sainte Maxime with waterfront promenade shops and restaurants and a ferry service to Saint Tropez The beach of Cavalaire sur Mer the longest sand beach on the coast Boat tours of the Rade or harbour of Toulon the main anchorage of the French Navy Wind surfing offshore of the peninsula of Giens Le Thoronet Abbey one of the best preserved medieval Cistercian monasteries in France The Baptistery of Frejus Cathedral the oldest Christian structure in Provence The hilltop village of Bormes les Mimosas The Iles d Hyeres including the underwater natural park around the Ile de Port Cros Hiking in the Massif de l Esterel The hilltop villages of Gassin Ramatuelle Montauroux Fayence Callian Seillans Tourrettes Saint Paul en Foret Mons and Tanneron in the Fayence region The Verdon Gorge Lake of Sainte Croix and hilltop villages of the upper Var The hilltop villages wine caves and vineyards near Bandol Industry edit The construction industry employs 28 000 workers in the Var of which 4 000 work alone and 4 500 companies employ the remaining 24 000 salaried workers Industry generates an annual turnover of 2 5 billion Of this 500 million is derived from public works 10 Agriculture edit 800 km2 or 13 of the total area is dedicated to agriculture on which 40 000 people 14 of the Var working population depend for their livelihoods The department also has 10 km2 of horticultural land of which 4 km2 are covered Var is France s largest grower of cut flowers producing some 500 million stems a year Livestock farming is mainly sheep 50 000 and goats 4 200 Vines and viticultural related activities account for 345 km2 of farmland The 450 domaines or cooperatives and the 4 AOCs appellation d origine controlee produce 150 million litres of wine a year Var leads the world in the production of rose wine Other important agricultural products include olives cultivated on 42 km2 of land a quarter of all French olive groves and processed in 40 mills figs the Var produces 80 of France s figs and honey 800 tonnes per year There are also 9 km2 of market gardens Agricultural turnover in Var is 610 million per year of which 45 is sales of wines and 42 of horticultural products 11 In 2008 the Var department received approximately 15 million in farm subsidies under the EU Common Agriculture Policy an average of about 6 000 per recipient farm This compares with an average across France as a whole of over 18 000 per farm 12 Viticulture edit AOC Coteaux varois en Provence is a recent appellation d origine controlee in Provence The name Coteaux Varois was first used in 1945 and became an AOC in 1993 the name was changed to Couteaux Varois en Provence in 2005 The red wines principally use the grenache cinsaut mourvedre and syrah grapes White wines use the clairette grenache blanc rolle blanc Semillon Blanc and Ugni Blanc There are 22 km2 in this AOL It produces 80 roses 17 red wines and 3 white wines Bandol AOC is grown on the coast west of Toulon mostly around the villages of La Cadiere d Azur and Castellet Wines of this appellation must have at least 50 Mourvedre grapes though most have considerably more citation needed Other grapes used are Grenache Cinsault Syrah and Carignan See also editArrondissements of the Var department Cantons of the Var department Communes of the Var department List of senators of VarReferences edit Repertoire national des elus les conseillers departementaux data gouv fr Plateforme ouverte des donnees publiques francaises in French 4 May 2022 Telechargement du fichier d ensemble des populations legales en 2021 The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies 28 December 2023 a b Populations legales 2019 83 Var INSEE a b c d Normales et records meteorologiques Infoclimat www infoclimat fr Retrieved 2023 11 06 Normales et records meteorologiques Infoclimat www infoclimat fr Retrieved 2023 11 06 Historique du Var Le SPLAF Evolution et structure de la population en 2016 INSEE Comparateur de territoires INSEE Urban unit of Toulon corrected for Ceyreste and La Ciotat that are in Bouches du Rhone Nationale Assemblee Assemblee nationale Les deputes le vote de la loi le Parlement francais Assemblee nationale Var Matin Monday 9 June 2008 Var Matin and Le Magazin du Conseil general du Var farmsubsidy org External links editVar at Curlie Coolidge William Augustus Brevoort 1911 Var Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed pp 904 905 in French Prefecture website in French Departmental Council website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Var department amp oldid 1183782519, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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