Saint-Dié-des-Vosges

Saint-Dié-des-Vosges

French commune
nomcommune=Saint-Dié-des-Vosges
| région=Lorraine
département=Vosges| arrondissement=Saint-Dié-des-Vosges
canton=Chief town of 2 cantons
insee=88413
cp=88100
maire=Christian Pierret
mandat=
intercomm= |longitude=6.949
latitude=48.284
alt moy=343 m
alt mini=310 m
alt maxi=901 m
hectares=4,615
km²=46.15
sans=22 569
date-sans=1999
dens=489
date-dens=1999

Saint-Dié-des-Vosges, commonly referred to as Saint-Dié, is a commune of northeastern France.

It is located in the Vosges "département", of which it is a "sous-préfecture".

Geography

Saint-Dié is located in the vosgian mountain 80 km southeast of Nancy and 45 km of Lunéville. This way principaly on the valley of Meurthe was always the more frequented, and first adapted by rail in 1864, that now it lounges the mainchief road.

Saint-Dié-des-Vosges, headchief of a arrondissement called with the same name, belongs to "Les Vosges", departement of France. This "commune" with a little town in her center, is approximatly 50 km northeast of the headchief Épinal, which is joined by two roads, southly the passes of Haut-Jacques and Bruyères or northly the pass of Haut-du-Bois and the ancient land of Rambervillers. By rail Epinal is 61 km far from Saint-Dié.

The river Meurthe flows in the permian basin of Saint-Dié surrounded by well-wooded mountains called Ormont, Kemberg and La Madeleine. The upper top of these mountains upon 550 m high is made of triassic formations, especially the so-called "vosgian sandstone", a kind of red sandstone.

Features

The town was completely redesigned and vastly rebuilded, in fact largely created in french uniform style after the fire of 1757. But major part of which was destroyed in 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 18th century. A fine cloister initiating in 14th and 15th century, but never fisnished is containing a stone pulpit, and communicates with the Petite-Eglise or Notre-Dame-de-Galilée, a well-preserved specimen of Romanesque architecture in the 12th century. All this monuments was restaured or rebuilt in the same way times to times after 1950.

In 1900 the Council House named "Mairie" contained a theatre, a library with some valuable manuscripts, and a museum of antiquities. A new hôtel-de-ville has been built after 1948 100 meters to the west. At its west side there is now a monument by Merci to Jules Ferry, long ago in a place under the Cathedral. Jules Ferry was a great french politician of the beginning Third Republic born in the town in 1832.

The right side of the Meurthe, after the second world war, was completely eradicated and mostly people lived outside the town in wood cabins during decades. The radical plan created by Le Corbusier in 1945 imaginating a large plaza with factories and other buildings in the heart of the city was rejected in 1947, and only one private factory belongings 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 fisnished only at the end 1954.

Economy

The town was industrial long before she's benefited from the immigration of Alsatians after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871. Its industries included the spinning and weaving of cotton, bleaching, wire-drawing, metal-founding, and the manufacture of hosiery, woodwork of various kinds, machinery, iron goods and wire-gauze. Since wars majors industrial activities enter in a spiral of decline. Now the town is especially a center of public services, education institutions and hospital and private merchant places like supermarkets.

History

Saint-Dié ("Deodatum, Theodata, S. Deodati Fanum") is named after [saint] Deodat. This holy men, as he is named popularly "le bonhomme", is foundator of a ban, a political and christian subdivision of the royal territory, originally called "foresta" in the 7th century. Old religious historians believed he was episcopus of Nevers and was precisely Deodatus of Nevers. Deodatus would had given up his episcopal functions to retire to a desert place. Some sources connect the name, however, with an earlier saint, Deodatus of Blois (d. 525). [http://www.saintpatrickdc.org/ss/0424.htm#deod]

Archeology and historic toponymes proves the large anteriority of human occupations. A hypothesis of a columna constructed by Romans, in a locus originally dedicated to Tiwaz, Tius, god of war, may explain ancients ceremonies in old saint-Dié chapelle, under the Kemberg mountain locally called Saint-Martin. Deodatus who may be at his end of life a hiberniensis papa - and not a niverniensis pope, a bishop from Nevers - would have lived in a old monasterium or "vieux moutier" above this old chapelle and water.

Legends writed since 11th century and popular traditions says saint Dié dreamed a new monasterium in a little hill called "monticule des Jointures" in the other riverside he could see. A little monastic community dedicated to saint Maurice, has been probably founded during the carolingians times. It is proved in this locus since the 10th century. After 10O6 the monastery has taken the name Saint-Dié that progressively erase the first name. The little monastery was also partially destroyed by fire in 1065 and in 1155.

Maybe they were a chapter of canons, maybe they became two centuries later. Historians deny Brunon de Dabo-Egisheim, futur Pope Leo X, to be young monk and great provost here, but his family plays a great role in the elevated status of this religious place, giving after the first crusades their blason. But canons who subsequently held the rank of provost or dean were coming from very rich and noble family. Among those Giovanni de Medici and several princes coming from the ducal House of Lorraine. Among the extensive privileges enjoyed by them was that of coining money. The Duchy of Lorraine buys last rights of monnoyage 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. Towards the end of the 15th century it was supposed by a local historian one of the earliest printing presses of Lorraine was founded at Saint-Dié. But all the printing figures and even filigraned papers were the same in a strasburg's printer. The institution of a town council in 1628 which appropriated part of their temporal jurisdiction, and numerous french occupation contributed greatly to diminish the financial influence of the canons. During the Stanislas reign and after the Lorraine annexion in 1776, the establishment in 1777 of a bishopric condamned the venerable institution. They serve the first bishop Monseigneur de Chaumont. With the French Revolution all the religious people were completely swept away.

During the wars of the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries the town was repeatedly sacked. 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

The diocese of Saint-Dié was erected 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 called by legends "Galilée", established by Saint Deodatus (Dié) (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 was instead a suffragan of the Diocese of Trier.

Cosmography

Vautrin Lud, Canon of St-Dié in charge of the mines of the valleys is chaplain and secretary of René II, Duke of Lorraine. He aimed set up a printing-establishment at St-Dié. But he surely facilitates reflexions on the theme of earth representation and also meetings with who we could named nowdays geographers, the German cartograph 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 from Lisbon the Soderini Letter, an abridged account of the four voyages of Amerigo Vespucci. Lud had this translated into Latin by Basin de Sandaucourt. The translation dedicated to 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 Vosgean Gymnasium 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".

First and second print in August 1507 appeared may-be at St-Dié , a third at Strasburg 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). M 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".

Born, has been educated or has lived in Saint-Dié

* Jean Fredel, captain of the Duke of Lorraine, Charles II
* Claude Bausmont, "châtelain" and "cellerier" of Saint-Dié (1430-1477). This old warrior didn't save and capture in january 1477 Charles le Téméraire escaping from the battle of Nancy.
* Vautrin Lud (1448-1527), canon, master of the brotherhood saint Sébastien, and hypothetical creator of the Vosgian Gymnasium for the year 1507.
* Mother Mechtilde, institutrice des bénédictines de l'adoration perpétuelle (born Catherine Barre in 1619, dead 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 revolutionnary 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
* Père Antoine, catholic missionnaire in Canada born in Saint-Dié
* Léon Carrière (1814-1877), physician and geologue, father of the forestry restaurator in the south Alps Paul Carrière.
* Jean-Romary Grosjean (1815-1888), musicologist and cathedral organist.
* Henry Bardy (1829-1909), pharmacian, president-foundator 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 et gravor born in Saint-Dié
* Albert Ohl des Marais, gravor et historian
* Georges Baumont (1885-1974), professor of literature, librarian et local historian
* Yvan Goll (1891-1950), poet and novelist, student only few years in Saint-Dié
* Jacques Brenner (1922-2001), writer and critic born in saint-Dié.

Higher education

University Institute of Technology : IUT (Institut universitaire de technologie)
*Robotics
*Electronics
*Computing
*Internet
*Graphic design
*Communication

Twin cities

* Arlon (Belgium)
* Cattolica (Italy)
* Crikvenica (Croatia)
* Friedrichshafen (Germany)
* Lowell (United States)
* Meckhe (Senegal)
* Ville de Lorraine (Canada)
* Zakopane (Poland)

External links

* [http://www.ville-saintdie.fr City council website]
* [http://www.iutsd.uhp-nancy.fr University Institute of Technology website]

ources and references

*1911
*Catholic


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