La Chapelle-Gauthier (yours)

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La Chapelle-Gauthier
La Chapelle-Gauthier (France)
La Chapelle-Gauthier
region Normandy
Department Your
Arrondissement Bernay
Canton Breteuil
Community association Intercom Bernay Terres de Normandie
Coordinates 48 ° 59 ′  N , 0 ° 28 ′  E Coordinates: 48 ° 59 ′  N , 0 ° 28 ′  E
height 144-207 m
surface 16.43 km 2
Residents 398 (January 1, 2017)
Population density 24 inhabitants / km 2
Post Code 27270
INSEE code

Mairie

La Chapelle-Gauthier is a commune with 398 inhabitants (at January 1, 2017) in the Eure in the region of Normandy . It belongs to the canton of Breteuil .

geography

La Chapelle-Gauthier is located in the Pays d'Ouche at an average altitude of 176 meters above sea ​​level, 25 kilometers southeast of Lisieux and 16 kilometers southwest of Bernay . The municipality has an area of ​​16.43 square kilometers. La Chapelle-Gauthier is surrounded by the neighboring communities of La Folletière-Abenon , La Trinité-de-Réville and La Vespière .

The geological subsoil consists primarily of sandstone and conglomerate rock , the so-called poudingue . La Chapelle-Gauthier is one of the communities in the Eure department where there are so-called Marnières . These are old marl pits that have been poorly filled with rubble. They can open after heavy rain, when the debris filling is washed into the side passages. Floods and landslides occurred as a result of storms Lothar and Martin in December 1999 .

history

In the Pouillé of Lisieux, the ecclesiastical register of the feudal lords, Robert de la Haye is mentioned in 1350 as Seigneur of La Chapelle-Gauthier. Part of the fiefdom was given in the 14th century to a Beaudouin family , who also held the title of Viscount of Orbec . This fiefdom was in the possession of the family until the 17th century, and over time they wrote themselves to Baudouin .

In the Hundred Years War (1337-1453) La Chapelle-Gauthier and the surrounding villages were occupied by English troops. The fiefs of the seigneurs, who remained loyal to the French king, were confiscated and given to the English. A fiefdom belonged to the Prévôt des marchands Jean Jouvenel († 1431). Between 1424 and 1444, several former residents of La Chapelle-Gauthier in Bernay were executed for joining the French resistance fighters. The Jouvenel des Ursins family got the fief back after the occupation. In the 17th century the Guiry family inherited this fief and in 1670 both fiefs were merged by La Chapelle-Gauthier.

In 1584, up to sixteen thousand rebellious peasants gathered in La Chapelle-Gauthier. The rebels were named after the village Gauthiers (also Gautiers ). The reason for this peasant uprising in the Huguenot War (1562–1598) was looting by soldiers and excessive seigneurial and royal taxes . The Gauthiers joined the Holy League . About twelve thousand Gauthiers found themselves in Bernay in 1588 and holed up there. Thereupon François de Bourbon, duc de Montpensier Bernay besieged with his troops, conquered the city, which was then plundered and pillaged. The Gauthiers in Bernay were killed. About three thousand Gauthiers were in La Chapelle-Gauthier at the same time. They surrendered to the troops and almost all returned to their work, the uprising ended in 1589.

In 1793 La Chapelle-Gauthier received in the course of the French Revolution (1789-1799) as La Chappelle Gauthier the status of a municipality and in 1801 the right to local self-government. In 1845 the village of Saint-Laurent-des-Grès was incorporated, which had 201 inhabitants in 1841. During the Second World War (1939-1945), La Chapelle-Gauthier was bombed in the summer of 1944. The windows on the south side of the Notre-Dame church were damaged.

The portal of the Notre-Dame church
Number of inhabitants
(source:)
year 1793 1836 1846 1886 1936 1954 1968 1982 1990 1999 2016
Residents 590 482 682 528 433 473 426 349 350 381 404

Culture and sights

The yew trees at the Church of Notre-Dame and the Church of Saint-Laurent in Grès are classified as site classé ("natural monument"). The yew trees are several hundred years old. The Notre-Dame church was completely rebuilt at the end of the 18th century. The Saint-Laurent church is much older. It was renovated in the 17th century. Its porch was built in the 15th century.

In the Church of Notre-Dame there is a silver chalice with a guild mark from Paris from September 11, 1789. It was classified in 1994 as a Monument historique ('historical monument').

Economy and Infrastructure

The former train station

Until the 19th century, Saint-Laurent-des-Grès was known for its fine sandstone, which was used throughout the region. Between Saint-Laurent and La Goulafrière you can still see the traces of the quarries.

The main occupations in La Chapelle-Gauthier today are agriculture and fruit growing for the production of cider . In the municipality there are controlled designations of origin (AOC) for Pont-l'Évêque , Camembert (Camembert de Normandie) , Calvados (also Calvados Pays d'Auge ), Pommeau (Pommeau de Normandie) and cider (Pays d'Auge) as well as protected geographical areas Information (IGP) for pork (Porc de Normandie) , poultry (Volailles de Normandie) and cider (Cidre de Normandie and Cidre normand) .

La Chapelle-Gauthier used to have a train station. The Lisieux  - Orbec  - La Trinité-de-Réville line was opened in 1882, and operations were not stopped until 1966. Opposite the station was the station café. Both houses have been rebuilt and now serve as residential buildings. Today the next train station is in Bernay. The nearest airport, the Aéroport de Deauville - Saint-Gatien in Saint-Gatien-des-Bois, is 48 kilometers northwest of the municipality . La Chapelle-Gauthier is also between the D438 departmental road and the A28 autoroute .

Web links

Commons : La Chapelle-Gauthier  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Le village de la Chapelle-Gauthier. In: Annuaire-Mairie.fr. Retrieved August 16, 2011 (French).
  2. a b c Anatole Caresme, Charpillon: Dictionnaire historique de toutes les communes du département de l'Eure . E. Cagniard, Rouen 1868, p. 724–729 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  3. a b c Collectivités locales, Communes. (No longer available online.) In: eure.pref.gouv.fr. Préfecture de l'Eure, archived from the original on April 27, 2013 ; Retrieved August 17, 2011 (French). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.eure.pref.gouv.fr
  4. Auguste Le Prevost : Mémoires et notes de M. Auguste Le Prevost pour servir à l'histoire du département de l'Eure . Ed .: Léopold Delisle, Louis Paulin Passy. tape 1 . Auguste Herissey, Évreux 1862, p. 492 (French, Mémoires et notes de M. Auguste Le Prevost pour servir à l'histoire du département de l'Eure [accessed August 16, 2011]).
  5. ^ Daniel Delattre, Emmanuel Delattre: L'Eure, les 675 communes . Editions Delattre, Grandvilliers 2000, pp. 30-32 (French).
  6. a b c Yves Montron: A La Découverte De L'Eure . Editions Charles Corlet, Condé-sur-Noireau 1997, ISBN 2-85480-616-6 , pp. 30 (French).
  7. ^ Michel and Thérèse Mesnil: Le Canton de Broglie . son histoire et son patrimoine. Les Éditions de la Bouteille à la Mer, Paris July 1998, p. 49 ff . (French).
  8. ^ Michel and Thérèse Mesnil: Le Canton de Broglie . son histoire et son patrimoine. Les Éditions de la Bouteille à la Mer, Paris July 1998, p. 56 (French).
  9. La Chapelle-Gauthier - notice communal. In: cassini.ehess.fr. Retrieved August 16, 2011 (French).
  10. Mobilize. In: Base Palissy. Ministère de la culture, accessed August 16, 2011 (French).