The history of Savoy presents a synthesis of the various periods, from prehistory to the present day, of the geographical and historical entity known as Savoy, a territory whose definition has varied over the course of historical periods, until it was defined by the two French departments of Savoie and Haute-Savoie.[1]
According to Abbé Adolphe Gros, the territory of Savoie comprises the "country situated between the Rhône and the Alps, south of Lake Geneva and north of the Dauphiné ".[2] Savoie thus forms a "solid block, a sort of thick tree trunk stretching 145 km from north to south, and swelling to a hundred km from east to west, covering an area of just over 10,000 km2".[3] The region's varied landscapes are marked by Alpine influences, from the lowland Pre-Alps to the snow-capped peaks of the Alps, linked by large intra-Alpine valleys. These valleys are at the origin of the traditional provincial divisions: Savoie Propre, Maurienne, Tarentaise, Genevois, Faucigny and Chablais.
The region's history begins with prehistoric settlement, from the 16th millennium B.C. by hunter-gatherers to the sedentarization of lakeside cities. During its protohistory, which began around the middle of the 3rd millennium BC, the copper-rich subsoil enabled the development of a proto-industry producing artefacts, as well as commercial import circuits from Germanic regions.[4] Gallic tribes such as the Allobroges, Ceutrons, Graiocèles and Médulles inhabited the area in the first centuries BC, before Roman intervention began in the 1st century BC. The Romans won their first victory over the Allobroges in 121 BC, then definitively in 62 BC. Other peoples were conquered from 16 to 7 BC. During the Gallo-Roman period, present-day Savoie corresponded to Sapaudie (Latin: Sapaudia), then occupied by the Burgundians, until its integration into Frank or Carolingian Saboia.[5]
With the disappearance of the empire, then of the kingdom of Burgundy, great seigniorial families emerged - Humbertiens, then the House of Savoy, Géroldiens or the House of Geneva, Faucigny - and tried to increase their possessions and power (building the counties of Maurienne, then Savoy or Geneva). The Humbertians, established in the Maurienne region and at the origin of the future House of Savoy, gradually took control of the entire region, eliminating rival houses, and assumed the definitive title of Counts of Savoy from the eleventh century until they obtained the title of "Duke" in 1416. Control of the Alpine passes and slopes led to the traditional nickname of "Gatekeepers of the Alps".[6][7][8] The House of Savoy gradually came to control a territory with shifting borders, stretching from German-speaking Switzerland to Nice, and from the gates of Lyon to the plain of Turin.
Increasingly looking "beyond the mountains" (i.e. across the Alps to Italy), the House of Savoy abandoned its cradle in favor of the Italian policy. Annexed for some, united for others, Savoy passed to neighboring France with the Treaty of Turin in 1860. A poor province at the start of the 19th century, Savoy grew thanks to the exploitation of white coal in the 19th century and the development of spa and winter tourism from the beginning of the 20th century, as well as the fine metallurgical industry, based on the watchmaking industry established in Faucigny as early as the 18th century, and the heavy industry in the Tarentaise and Maurienne valleys in the 19th century.[9] These activities helped stop the hemorrhaging of immigrants.[10] In the second half of the twentieth century, identity movements asserted a specific cultural identity, or even political sovereignty.
The land we call Savoie had a curious destiny: a land of empire in the Middle Ages, but divided from the outset between the call of the Rhône valley and that of the Po valley. Over the centuries, it was the cradle of a dynasty of French language and culture, but the fortunes of its history made it the mother of Italian unity, fighting at different times against the Dauphiné, against the Valais, against the Calvinist Geneva, against the Milan, and succeeding despite these incessant wars, It was for a long time a bone of contention between France and the Holy Roman Empire, then between France and Spain, and finally between France and Austria, and is now a link between the two friendly countries that occupy both sides of the Alps.
— André Chamson, Archives de l'ancien duché de Savoie, [1]
Prehistory
editStone Age
editKey dates:[11]
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During the Quaternary period, the Alps experienced periods of glacial flooding and recession. With the last advances of the Würm glaciation, the various traces disappeared.[12] However, one site was spared, enabling the discovery of ancient traces of human presence in this region in a cave in the commune of Onnion, in the present-day département of Haute-Savoie.[12][13] Located at an altitude of 1,900 m, in the cliffs of the Rocher Blanc, the Baré cave was the subject of several excavation campaigns in the 1950s. They uncovered flint tools and bones belonging to several animal species over a period ranging from 70,000 to 30,000 BC.[12][13] Some examples are the bear and the cave lion, but also species still present such as the boreal lynx, the brown bear, the wolf, the fox, the badger, the marten, the red deer, the ibex, the chamois, the European hare, the marmot. Since 2013, the cave has been walled off to protect access and preserve the site.[13]
The Rhône glacier, at the end of the last ice age, opened up Lake Geneva around 18,000/15,000 B.C. Between 15,000 and 6,000 B.C., excavations in the 19th and 20th centuries have attested to the presence of seasonal hunters. There are deposits from the Magdalenian, Azilian and Mesolithic periods. These reindeer and then deer hunters were present in the foreland (around 600 m altitude). At the foot of the Salève, in Étrembières near Geneva, the first Paleolithic work of art was found in 1843 and immediately recognized. There are caves or shelters at Musièges and La Balme-de-Thuy, Haute-Savoie, Saint-Thibaud-de-Couz and Saint-Christophe in Savoie, dating back between 13,000 and 6,000 years.[11][4]
During the Neolithic period (between 5,000 and 2,500 BC), sedentary farming communities settled on the plains and in the major valleys at mid-altitude: numerous deposits attest to this. Excavations carried out in some forty municipalities along the lakeshore have uncovered forty-seven sites from this period and forty-four from the Bronze Age. These include, respectively, 4 and 2 sites on Lake Aiguebelette, 9 and 19 on Lake Bourget, 22 and 13 on Lake Léman and 12 and 10 on Lake Annecy.[14]
The oldest remains, such as the Aime necropolis, date back to the Middle Neolithic.[11]
In Thonon, on the shores of Lake Geneva, a Middle Neolithic necropolis of the "Chamblande type" was uncovered at a site known as Genevray in 2004.[15] The site uncovered 220 burials, dated between 3,300 and 4,800 BC, i.e. from the middle of the 5th millennium BC to the end of the 4th millennium BC.[16]
Other evidence of Alpine megalithic occupation includes hundreds of cup stones in the Tarentaise and Maurienne valleys at altitudes of over 2,000 m, such as the Pierre aux Pieds, at 2,750 m on the Pisselerand plateau, at 2,100 m, with 150 cupules, as well as the Pierre aux Chouettes or Pierre Chevète in Saint-Martin-de-Belleville, in the hamlet of Villarenger.[17]
The Petit-Saint-Bernard pass (2,188 m) features a cromlech that is not necessarily Neolithic.
Protohistory
editCopper was mined around 2500 BC, and found in the form of flat axes (Sevrier, Faverges, Saint-Pierre-d'Albigny and Maurienne).
The Early Bronze Age (2000/1600 BC) began with the first axes and pins imported from the Valais, an active production zone. These metallurgists exploited the copper deposits of the Upper Tarentaise.[18]
In the Middle Bronze Age (1600/1350 BC), bronzes were again imported, but from southwest Germany.[18]
From the 14th century B.C. onwards, imports from Germany continued, but local metal production gradually began under the major influence, probably even brought by migrants from Middle Europe, of the urnfield culture (Champs d'Urnes). A hot, dry climate led to a drop in lake levels, and by 1050 BC, they had set up metal and pottery workshops on the shores of these lakes, which were easily supplied with fuel by floating.[19] These lakeside settlements lasted until the 7th century, when they were submerged by rising waters caused by a major climatic change. The most numerous of these were on Lac du Bourget, where abundant material is on display at the Musée Savoisien in Chambéry.[20]
From the Middle Bronze Age onwards, the Alpine valleys were criss-crossed by a trade flow between the Po plain and Savoy, which received Italian bronzes (weapons and jewelry). Around 950 BC, the copper mines of the Maurienne were exploited by lake metallurgists.[20]
During the Iron Age, from the 6th century B.C. onwards, Savoy was home to Hallstattian horse-breeders who settled in the plains, leaving their mark in burial mounds (Gruffy, Saint-Ferréol, Talloires, La Tour, etc.), while independent peoples from the late Bronze Age occupation flourished in the mountain valleys: the Ceutrons in Tarentaise and Faucigny, and the Medulles in Maurienne. They controlled and ensured trade between the Po plain and the Rhone valley, which brought them a wealth of original and abundant funerary jewelry, characteristic of a true "Alpine civilization".[17]
Pre-Christian Alpine traditions date from this period (Austria, Switzerland, Savoy, Northern Italy, Slovenia), whose characters - Krampus, Berchta (Perchten), wild man - are part of an endangered, folklorized cultural heritage, on the verge of extinction due to the disappearance of traditional ways of life that have been preserved for longer in the Alps.[20]
The Gauls did not colonize Savoy until the 4th century BC, when they established a small settlement south of Lake Geneva. By the 2nd century, the Allobroges had occupied virtually all of the pre-Alpine plains: the area around Geneva and Lake Geneva, the Chambéry cluse, the Savoy combe, and so on.[21] Further inland, in the valleys within the Alps, independent peoples were beginning to be Celtized, especially in the Tarentaise region, where the road to Italy passed, possibly the route taken by Hannibal when he crossed the Alps in 218 BC.[22][23] The Ceutrons were found in the Tarentaise valley and upper Faucigny, the Médulles in the lower Maurienne and the Graiocèles in the upper Maurienne, most probably on Mont-Cenis (Col du Mont-Cenis).[24][18]
The Roman Savoy
editThis part of the Alps rebelled against Roman rule. The Roman conquest of Allobrogia took place in several stages between 122 and 60 BC.[19]
Key dates:
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The Romanization of Savoy really began around 6-4 BC, when all the valleys were conquered and controlled, while the first contact with the Romans dates back to the crossing of the Alps by the consul Fulvius Flaccus around the Montgenèvre pass.[24] The Savoy region was of strategic interest to the Romans, with passes and roads leading from the peninsula to Gaul, notably the one from Mediolanum (Milan) to Vienna (Vienne), crossing the French Tarentaise region. Roman Savoy lasted until the 2nd - 5th centuries, when Germanic peoples, the "Barbarians", made their first incursions into the territory, such as the Alemanni, followed by the final settlement of the Burgundians by general Aetius around 434.[25]
Medieval period: from the Burgundian kingdoms to the feudal societies of Savoy
editIn 443, Sapaudia was granted to the Burgundians.[26] The Chronica Gallica (452) mentions their settlement.[27][5]
Key dates:[1]
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A Burgundian kingdom was established during the 5th and 6th centuries, but was unable to oppose Franks' claims. The Merovingians ( 6th - 7th centuries), then the Carolingians from the 7th century onwards, intervened in the region. With the demise of the Carolingian Empire, a kingdom of Burgundy came into being. The death of the last king of Burgundy, Rudolf III, gave rise to a war of succession, during which his nephew Eudes II de Blois contested the inheritance from the German emperor Conrad the Salic.[25] In each camp, a representative of the region's two powerful emerging seigniorial families, the Count of Geneva Gérold, allied himself with the Count of Blois, while Count Humbert, former advisor and vassal of Rudolf III, took the imperial side.[25] The Count of Geneva, supported by Archbishop Buchard of Lyon, was defeated by Count Humbert near the city of Geneva in 1034.[25][28]
Léon Menabrea sums up the period with these words: "Little by little, the petty feudatories faded away; a star grew and blazed in the middle of the feudal firmament: the star of the House of Savoy".[29] Through a policy of marriages and wars, the House of Savoy succeeded in controlling the whole of this ancient Sapaudia, giving birth to the county and then the duchy of Savoy from 1416 onwards.[30]
Modern period: from the Duchy of Savoy to the Kingdom of Sardinia (1416 to 1792)
editIn 1416, the county of Savoy, under Amadeus VIII the Peaceful, and surrounded by the duchies of Milan and Burgundy and the French Dauphiné, was granted the status of duchy within the Holy Roman Empire by Emperor Sigismund. In 1418, the Duke of Savoy inherited the Italian province of Piedmont. Between French, German, Spanish and Austrian monarchies, the Savoyard sovereigns, through their alliances, became key players in Europe.[31] In the legislative sphere, the brought order to the inextricable maze of local customs. This was the apogee of the Savoy States.[32]
The end of Amadeus VIII's reign in 1440 ushered in a period of decadence that lasted until at least 1630, largely due to the duchy's inability to keep out of the conflicts between the great European powers. In 1475, during the Burgundian War, the duchy, an ally of Charles the Bold, lost several of its possessions. Berne and Fribourg, with the support of Lucerne, conquered the Pays de Vaud. On August 16, 1476, following the Duke of Burgundy's defeat at Grandson and Murten, the confederates returned most of the territory to the Duchy of Savoy for the sum of 50,000 florins (excluding the government of Aigle).[30] In November, following its defeat at the Battle of La Planta at the hands of the Valaisans and its confederate allies, the Duchy lost control of the Lower Valais and the Grand-Saint-Bernard Pass,[30] the gateway to the Mediterranean.
Savoy experienced five French occupations - in 1536–1559, 1600–1601, 1630–31, 1690–96 and 1703-1713 - and a Spanish occupation in 1742–49, not to mention the conquest of the Pays de Vaud by the Bernese and Fribourgeois in 1536, the occupation of western Chablais by the Bernese between 1536 and 1564 (bailliages of Thonon, Gex and Ternier-Gaillard, restored by the Treaty of Lausanne)[33] and eastern Chablais (from Saint-Maurice to Evian) by the Valaisans between 1536 and 1569. At the Treaty of Thonon, Emmanuel-Philibert and the Valaisans renewed their mutual defense alliance, and the governments of Evian and the Vallée d'Aulps were returned to Savoy (while the Valais kept the former Chablais, i.e. the left bank of the Rhône below Massongex, as far as Saint-Gingolph).[34]
In fact, France did not want Savoy to be annexed, but with the exception of Savoy, the duchy was gradually stripped of all its possessions west of the Alps: Bresse and Bugey, Pays de Gex (Treaty of Lyon, January 17, 1601, between Henri IV's France and Charles Emmanuel's Duchy of Savoy), Pays de Vaud north of Lake Geneva and Bas-Valais, so that the duchy's center of gravity increasingly shifted to the Italian side, leading in 1563 to the official relocation of the capital to Turin at the expense of Chambéry (a de facto move since 1536).[31] The amalgam between Savoy and Piedmont never really took place, probably for cultural rather than geographical reasons: Savoy belongs to the French area, while Piedmont is Italian.[32]
When the Protestant Reformation swept across Europe, Savoy remained predominantly Catholic, even though the Chablais region had, for a time, sided with the Protestants when it was occupied by the Bernese between 1536 and 1569.[31] The Counter-Reformation was symbolized by François de Sales, a former lawyer and brilliant intellectual turned bishop, who set about reclaiming the Chablais.[31]
In 1561, Emmanuel-Philibert of Savoy (1528-1580) promulgated the Edict of Rivoli of September 22, 1561, replacing the use of Latin in public documents with French in Savoy and the Aosta Valley, and with Italian in Piedmont and the county of Nice.[29]
Even when peace was established on a lasting basis, Savoy remained a poor country where the majority of the peasant population often lived in precarious conditions. From the 16th century onwards, emigration to southern Germany and Lyon became a tradition. Village identity remained very strong, based in particular on the relatively large scale of communal property.[31]
In 1713, Victor Amadeus II received the crown of Sicily, which he exchanged for Sardinia. Henceforth, the States of Savoy would also be known as the Kingdom of Sardinia or the "Sardinian Kingdom". Victor Amadeus II, who belonged to the generation of enlightened despots, managed his states soundly and implemented a series of reforms, some of which were ahead of their time, such as the Sardinian Map a 1:2400 cadastre designed to improve tax collection.[32]
His successor, Victor-Amédée III of Sardinia, allowed Savoyard communities to buy back part of their seigneurial rights, which led to some resentment among the nobility.[32]
The French occupation of the duchy from 1792 to 1815
editIn 1792, the French crossed the border once again, this time it was the revolutionaries. A National Assembly of the Allobroges, meeting in Chambéry, called for Savoy to be reunited with France.[35] Annecy, on the other hand, preferred union with Italy. Savoy and its six provinces became the Department of Mont-Blanc on November 27, 1792 (part of which, along with Geneva, became the Department of Léman in 1798). Republican laws were applied in Savoy, but the Civil Constitution of the Clergy was poorly accepted.[36]
From 1791 to 1793, the 7 districts (Annecy, Carouge, Chambéry, Cluses, Moûtiers, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne and Thonon) of the Mont-Blanc department provided 5 battalions of national volunteers.[35]
In 1794, Convention representative Antoine Louis Albitte, nicknamed the "Savoyard Robespierre", fought the enemies of the Revolution, but in the end, the guillotines built for the occasion were not used. On the other hand, repression of refractory priests lasted until the Concordat of 1801.[37]
The Empire represented a period of calm after the turmoil of the Revolution, despite conscription, which remained unpopular. With the repurchase of national property, the urban bourgeoisie continued the rise it had begun in the eighteenth century. The fall of the Napoleonic Empire marked Savoy's return to the monarchical fold of the House of Savoy.[35]
From Restoration to Buon governo (good government) and Risorgimento (1815 to 1860)
editIn June 1815, following the Treaty of Paris of 1815, Victor-Emmanuel I, brother of Charles-Emmanuel IV, returned from exile in Cagliari and recovered Piedmont and Savoy, but had to give the province of Carouge to the canton of Geneva (Treaty of Turin, March 16, 1816). The sovereign enjoyed a favorable a priori from the Savoyards, who remained attached to the House of Savoy.[37]
The policy could be summed up in a few words: all measures in force prior to 1792 were reinstated.[38] Under the Buon governo ("good government") regime, the police were very active, and the powers of the army were increased. The clergy regained a position of strength and re-established a kind of moral order.[32]
Ascending the throne in 1831, Charles Albert modernized the kingdom and, in 1848, following demonstrations in the kingdom's main cities, granted a statuto or constitution: the Statute of Albertin. Charles Albert embraced the cause of Italian independence and unity. This marked the beginning of the Risorgimento, an important moment in Italian history, but one that hardly concerned the Savoyards. In 1849, Charles Albert abdicated in favor of his son Victor-Emmanuel II. The new king and his Prime Minister Cavour were to be the major architects of Italian unity.[29]
The 1848 census recorded a population of 582,924 in Savoy, compared with 542,258 in 1858, which suggests a high level of emigration between these two dates.[39]
The 1860s annexation
edit"Annexation" is one of the names given to the union of the Duchy of Savoy with the Second French Empire in 1860, following the Treaty of Turin.[37]
With the Risorgimento, the people of Savoy, especially the elites, developed the idea that their sovereigns were abandoning the cradle of their family by favoring the Piedmont side and Italy. They also pointed to an administrative recruitment policy that discriminated against them because they were French-speaking.[36] On July 21, 1858, Cavour, Minister of the Kingdom of Sardinia, met the French Emperor Napoleon III, who was on a health cure in Plombières (Vosges). During this secret meeting, Napoleon III agreed to help Piedmont-Sardinia unify Italy, on condition that the Pope remained master of Rome and that the county of Nice and Savoy were ceded to France.[39]
In April 1859, the Austrian Empire declared war on the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia, which supplied arms to the Lombards.[40] The Sardinians were victorious at Palestro and Montebello, but the French allies prevailed with difficulty at Magenta (June 4) and Solferino (June 24). Worried, Napoleon III signed the Villafranca armistice (July 8). Cavour resigned, and the cession of Savoy and Nice no longer appeared to be on the agenda. Opinion began to stir over a possible French future.[40]
There was talk of keeping the province within the Sardinian kingdom, or even of attaching it to Switzerland.[Note 1][35][41][42] Faced with these ideas of partitioning the province, diplomacy began to take shape.[43][37] On March 24, 1860, the Treaty of Turin was signed, and Savoy was henceforth "attached" to France, subject to certain conditions and the support of the population (a requirement of the Swiss and British chancelleries). On April 1, the king released his Savoyard subjects from their oath of loyalty (royal renunciation). A date was set for the plebiscite, April 22. To avoid tensions in Savoy's northern territories, it was decided to issue a special "YES AND ZONE" bulletin, accompanied by the creation of a large free zone in northern Savoy, in order to win popular support for the question "Does Savoy want to be reunited with France?"[39]
On April 29, the Chambéry Court of Appeal announced the results:
Territory | Date | Registered | Voters | In favor of reunification | Voting "Yes and Zone | Against reunification | Abstention | Null (including pro-helvetic) | Army |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Savoie | 22/23 april | 135,449 | 130,839 | 130,523 | 47,000 | 235 | around 600 | 71 | 6,033 of 6,350 |
Sources : Henri Ménabréa[10] - Paul Guichonnet.[35][44] |
Contemporary period
editLand of emigration and immigration
editThe second half of the 19th century marked by a demographic decline
editThe demographic evolution of the two new departments experienced a crisis due to temporary or even permanent economic immigration, which was further accelerated by the Great War.[44] In half a century, the population of Savoy fell by 9.87% and that of Haute-Savoie by 4.62%. Without taking into account seasonal workers heading for the Lyon or Paris regions, or to the south of France, the gross loss of population for the Savoyard departments was 100,000 inhabitants.[44]
Year | Savoy | Haute Savoy | Annecy | Chambéry |
---|---|---|---|---|
1860 | 271 039 | 267 496 | 9 370 | 19 953 |
1866 | 271 663 | 273 768 | 11 554 | 18 835 |
1876 | 268 361 | 273 801 | 10 976 | 18 545 |
1896 | 259 790 | 265 872 | 12 894 | 21 762 |
1901 | 254 781 | 263 803 | 13 611 | 22 108 |
1911 | 247 890 | 255 137 | 15 622 | 22 958 |
1921 | 225 034 | 235 668 | 15 004 | 20 617 |
1926 | 231 210 | 245 317 | 17 223 | 23 400 |
Italian emigration to Savoy
editThe first wave of Italian emigration to Savoy dates back to the end of the 19th century, with the arrival of peasants from Friuli, Piedmont and Genoa, leaving poor rural areas to work as laborers or seasonal workers in Savoy. After the First World War, a new wave of migrants driven by poverty and political refugees arrived. There were clashes with the local population (notably due to rising unemployment in the thirties).[29]
During the Second World War, Savoy was part of the Italian occupation zone, making cohabitation with the Italian population a stormy affair. Benito Mussolini called for Savoy and Nice to be attached to Italy, but this was not to be. New immigrants settled in the 1950s and 1960s, before the arrival of North Africans in the 1950s to work on large hydraulic projects.[45]
In 2008, Savoy had 23,000 Italian nationals (2% of the population), but it is estimated that one in three Savoyards is of Italian origin.[43]
The First World War
editThe Savoyard population was hard hit by the First World War, despite the neutrality statutes in northern Savoy acquired in 1815, with around 20,000 deaths for France, a proportion relatively higher than the national average "as in all rural departments", explains historian Christian Sorrel.[46] If we look at the parish lists, we find 9,843 killed in Savoie and 10,400 in Haute-Savoie.[46][45] According to municipal lists, these figures differ slightly, with 8,881 for Savoy and 9,193 for Haute-Savoie.[46][47]
Savoyard troops fought on all fronts with infantry regiments (30th, 97th, 230th and 297th), as well as on the Alpine front against Austria, where they were nicknamed the "Blue Devils" along with the Dauphinois Alpine Chasseurs.[48] Although Savoy territory was not directly affected by the fighting, the rail disaster at Saint-Michel-de-Maurienne on December 12/13, 1917 claimed the lives of over 800 Savoyards on leave, returning from the Italian front for the Christmas holidays.[49]
From one war to another
editIn 1919, at the end of the war, France chose to denounce the Treaty of Turin through article 435 of the Treaty of Versailles, which abolished the neutralized zone in Savoy and the large free zone that had been established during the Annexation.[47]
Later in 1932, the International Court of Justice in The Hague condemned France and called on it to re-establish the free zone (directly linked to the conditions of annexation), in accordance with the previous treaties of 1815, 1816 and 1829, which had by then lapsed, i.e. 650 km2, as opposed to 4,000 km2 in the 1860 treaty.[47]
The Second World War
editAt the start of the Second World War, the Alpine front remained relatively unaffected by the conflict. On June 10, 1940, while France was fighting the German invaders, Mussolini declared war. Savoy was occupied by Italy, then by Germany. The communes of Haute Maurienne and those around the Petit-Saint-Bernard pass in Tarentaise were annexed by Italy.[50]
Savoy troops fought mainly in the Maurienne, Tarentaise and Rhône valleys. In 1944, the Savoy Resistance was particularly active on the Plateau des Glières, where Tom Morel set up a maquis, and at the Col des Saisies, for example. The struggle against the German army and the French militia came to a tragic end. The Plateau des Glières became a symbol of the Resistance.[50]
On August 24, Aix-les-Bains was liberated by Resistance fighters, followed by Chambéry the next day. A departmental Liberation Committee, bringing together Resistance movements, was set up, and Lucien Rose became Prefect. However, the German retreat through the Maurienne took a very long time, and was accompanied by numerous acts of violence and the destruction of villages (Hermillon) and bridges. Fighting continued throughout the winter of 1944–1945, particularly at the Roc Noir (Little-Saint-Bernard pass) and Mont-Cenis, between FTP, 13th BCA (Bataillon de Chasseurs Alpins) and German troops, to control the ridge lines. The fighting did not end until the surrender on May 8, 1945.[49]
Economic development in the region
editThe quarries
editIn Roman times, limestone was the most prized and abundant material throughout Savoie and, given the formation of the Alps, it was either clearly visible or outcropping under sparse vegetation cover. This makes it much easier to mine. However, from 1969 onwards, awareness of the fragility of the natural environment forced the various state and local players to protect this mountain area, notably with the creation of the Vanoise National Park in 1963 and the Mountain Law (1985).[51]
The White Revolutions
editThe mountain system is based on a threefold rationalized spatial organization: the valley bottoms remain strongly linked to human development and activities (housing, traffic, industry, agriculture); the slopes are either abandoned because of the difference in altitude, or are the location of villages/large hamlets based on forestry and mountain agriculture; finally, the mountain is divided into montagnettes (small mountains) frequented by farmers from spring to autumn, alpine pastures where the herds graze, and the high mountains made up of rock and persistent snow associated with glaciers.[51]
This system was challenged by industrial development in the late 19th century (white coal) and tourism (white gold).
White coal: the development of heavy industry
editThe mountain system was challenged by the exploitation of new natural mountain resources: the use of energy produced by waterfalls or white coal. The invention of the Dynamo (1870) revolutionized the use of white coal. Although this energy was already being used locally by local populations in sawmills along waterways, this technological innovation enabled the development of a veritable industrial fabric, particularly in the Tarentaise, Maurienne, Val d'Arly and Haut-Faucigny regions.[Note 2][52]
This industrial development disrupted and transformed local societies (with the emergence of new social organizations such as the peasant-worker movement), and put a stop to the rural exodus that had begun in the 19th century. After the war, the nationalization of electricity (1946), the loss of competition and the emergence of new forms of energy, and above all the lack of space for site expansion, led to a crisis in the 1960s. With great effort, some sites were maintained. Socially, the status of farmer-worker disappeared, and only the worker remained. The consequences on the landscape were visible, with the disappearance of vineyards and the appearance of agricultural wastelands.[52]
Faced with this new crisis in the mountain environment, local authorities began to consider the development of new activities to compensate for this industrial decline.
White gold: the development of tourism
editTourism first appeared in Savoy with the "discovery" of the Alps in the 18th century. Initially limited to the Pre-Alps and thermal baths (as in Aix-les-Bains), tourists ventured into the heart of the Alps.[53]
From the 20th century onwards, the remues and alpine pastures opened up to new practices. The combination of suitable topography, regular snowfall and the determination of a number of players gave Savoy a new dynamism: winter tourism and skiing. The timid development of valley-bottom resorts, such as Chamonix, or medium-altitude resorts, such as Megève or Pralognan-la-Vanoise, was overturned by state and local government intervention in the 1960s. A new type of resort emerged: integrated resorts or "2nd and 3rd generation" resorts, such as Courchevel, Avoriaz and most of the resorts in the Tarentaise valley.[54]
Maintaining human activities and preserving the environment
editFaced with increasing numbers of tourists, the degradation caused by new developments and the saturation of human activities at the bottom of the valleys, the French government decided to protect areas untouched by human activity by decree on July 6, 1963. The Vanoise National Park (PNV) was born (the French equivalent of Italy's Gran Paradiso National Park, created in 1922). It covers the mountain range of the same name, between the upper Arc valley (Maurienne) and the upper Isère valley (Tarentaise), with a surface area of 52,840 ha. This first national park protected flora and fauna by preventing any human intervention in the area, with the exception of temporary habitats (refuges). The decree divides the park into two distinct territories: the high-mountain heartland, the sanctuary par excellence, and the peripheral zone, leaving the communes free to develop as they see fit. However, there is considerable tension between local populations, who wish to develop, developers, who wish to increase skiable areas at high altitude (approx. 3,000 m), and park managers, who guarantee the protection and preservation of natural areas.[54]
Moreover, the "mountain" is a fragile area that needs to be protected, both from an environmental and a human point of view. The Savoy region, most of which lies in the Alps, is therefore seen as a national periphery to be preserved, lest it become an empty zone or one reserved for summer and winter leisure activities. On June 9, 1985, the French law no. 85–30 on the development and protection of the mountains, known as the "mountain law", was promulgated, with Savoyard parliamentarian Louis Besson as rapporteur. This text recognizes the "specific nature of an area, its development and its protection", defining the mountain as "an area where living conditions are more difficult, thus hindering the exercise of certain economic activities, linked among other things to altitude, climatic conditions and steep slopes". Local councillors have thus obtained new support for the development of their commune. At the same time, with a view to "sustainable development", the Rhône-Alpes region set up regional nature parks, from which the Bauges massif benefited in 1995 (Parc naturel régional des Bauges).[53]
The resurgence of identity
editSavoy not only boasts a special identity within the national set-up, becoming the last territory with the county of Nice to be attached to the Hexagon by the Treaty of Turin in 1860, but also one of the oldest European states. The emergence of organized movements claiming their own identity came rather late. Indeed, it was not until a few years after the centenary celebrations of the annexation of Savoy, in the 1960s, that the beginnings of cultural and regionalist movements appeared, such as the Mouvement Région Savoy (1971), followed by the creation of an independence movement, the Ligue savoisienne, in 1994.[51]
The political elites, whether members of parliament or local figures, have never really been interested in this debate. However, the recurrence of the question of a Savoy region since the 1970s has forced them to come up with some answers. In 1983, the two Savoy departmental councils created the Entente régionale de Savoy, a supra-departmental public body responsible for promoting local tourism and heritage, promoting local products (the Savoy brand), managing subsidies for the University of Savoy and supporting cultural associations (including the Orchestre des Pays de Savoy). In 1999, following the emergence and apogee of the Ligue savoisienne movement, the structure attempted to counter this pro-independence breakthrough by evolving the Entente and creating the Assemblée des Pays de Savoy in 2001.[51]
In summer 2014, during the debate on the bill on the delimitation of regions, regional and departmental elections and modifying the electoral calendar, Savoy deputy and General Council president Hervé Gaymard, supported by his Haute-Savoy counterpart Christian Monteil, proposed an amendment that would enable the creation of a Savoy-Mont-Blanc territorial authority.[55][56] The project was rejected. However, on July 8, 2016, the "Assemblée des Pays de Savoy" became the "Conseil Savoy Mont Blanc", with a new visual identity.[57]
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ A petition gathered over 13,651 signatures, with 60 communes in the Faucigny region, 23 in the French Chablais and 13 around Saint-Julien-en-Genevois in favor of the Swiss project, supported by England.
- ^ Examples of sites:
*Tarentaise: Rosière in Bozel plant (Bozel-Malétra Group, 1922); Villard du Planay; Plombière and Château-Feuillet plants (iron-sillicon) in the commune of La Léchère; Notre-Dame-de-Briançon plant (processing of acetylene derivatives and production of graphite for electrodes, 1932);
*Maurienne: Compagnie AFC (Alais, Froges et Camargue) plants at Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, La Saussaz and La Praz;
*Val d'Arly: Plants of the Société d'électrochimie, d'électrométallurgie et des aciéries électriques d'Ugine (SECEMAEU);
*Haut-Faucigny: Chedde site at Passy (cf. Cheddite).
References
edit- ^ a b Pittard, 2017, Histoire de la Savoie et de ses Etats, p.982
- ^ Gros, Adolphe (2004) [1935]. Dictionnaire étymologique des noms de lieu de la Savoie (in French). La Fontaine de Siloë. pp. 443–444. ISBN 978-2-84206-268-2.
- ^ Raoul Blanchard, "La Savoie. Tableau géographique", in Comité d'organisation des fêtes du centenaire du Rattachement de la Savoie à la France, Mémorial de Savoie. Le Livre du Centenaire 1860 - 1960, Chambéry, Presses des imprimeries réunis de Chambéry, 1959, p. 25.
- ^ a b Aimé Bocquet. "Le peuplement des Alpes du Nord". aimebocquet.perso.sfr.fr. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2023-07-11.
- ^ a b Pierre Duparc, «La Sapaudia», Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, vol.102, no4, 1958, p.371-384 (read online)
- ^ Honoré Coquet; Michel Chabloz (2003). Les Alpes, enjeu des puissances européennes: l'Union européenne à l'école des Alpes ? (in French). Paris/Budapest/Torino: Harmattan. p. 71. ISBN 2-7475-5120-2..
- ^ Jeudy, Jean-Marie (2006). Les mots pour dire la Savoie: Et demain, j'aurai autre chose à vous raconter (in French). Montmélian: La Fontaine de Siloé. p. 142. ISBN 978-2-84206-315-3. Retrieved 24 July 2016..
- ^ Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, Jacques Julliard (2005). Histoire de France des régions: la périphérie française des origines à nos jours. Points (in French). Éditions du Seuil. p. 161. ISBN 978-2-02-078850-2. Retrieved 24 July 2016..
- ^ Romain Maréchal et Yannick Milleret, Atlas historique de Savoie, 1792-1914. ed. Société savoisienne d'histoire et d'archéologie, 2013, p.184
- ^ a b Menabrea 2009, p. 339.
- ^ a b c Béruard et al. 1998, pp. 8–12.
- ^ a b c Nouvelle encyclopédie de la Haute-Savoie 2007, p. 335 (Lire en ligne).
- ^ a b c La Rédaction, «Le site de la grotte du Barè désormais préservé», Le Messager, 14 novembre 2013
- ^ Yves Billaud et André Marguet, «Recherches archéologiques récentes dans les lacs de Savoie», La Rubrique des patrimoines de Savoie, no17, 2006, p.12
- ^ Loïc de Cargouët, Inrap. "La nécropole néolithique de Genevray à Thonon-les-Bains en Haute-Savoie". the Images of archaeology website, the iconotheque of Institut national de recherches archéologiques préventives. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
- ^ Inrap (7 August 2008). "Site archéologique : Le Genevray (dossier)". Institut national de recherches archéologiques préventives - www.inrap.fr. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
- ^ a b A. Ballet F., Raffaelli P. (1990). Rupestres : roches en Savoie, gravures, peintures, cupules. Chambéry: Musée savoisien. ISBN 978-2-905196-02-6.
- ^ a b c Guichonnet 1996
- ^ a b Victor de Saint-Genis (1868–1869). Histoire de Savoie, d'après les documents originaux, depuis les origines les plus reculées jusqu'à l'Annexion.
- ^ a b c Jean Prieur, Aimé Bocquet, Michelle Colardelle, Jean-Pierre Leguay, jean Loup, Jean Fontanelle (1983). Histoire de la Savoie : La Savoie des origines à l'an mil (in French).
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Sorrel 2006, p. 74 (read online)
- ^ Béruard et al. 1998, pp. 20–21.
- ^ Comby 1977, p. 10 "The first gatekeepers of the Alps, Médulles and Ceutrons control organized traffic through the major Alpine passes."
- ^ a b Demotz, Bernard; Loridon, François (2008). 1000 ans d'histoire de la Savoie: La Maurienne (in French). Vol. 2. Cléopas. p. 47. ISBN 9782952245975..
- ^ a b c d Laurent Ripart. "Du royaume burgonde au royaume de Bourgogne : les terres savoyardes de 443 à 1032". Archives départementales de la Savoie et de la Haute-Savoie - Sabaudia.org. p. 7. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
- ^ Sorrel 2006, p. 98 (read online).
- ^ Gros 2004, p. 444.
- ^ Article by Cyrille Ducourthial, « Géographie du pouvoir en pays de Savoie au tournant de l’an mil », in Guilleré, Christian; Poisson, Jean-Michel; Ripart, Laurent; Ducourthial, Cyrille (2008). Le royaume de Bourgogne autour de l'an mil. Sociétés, Religions, Politiques (in French). Chambéry: Université de Savoie. ISBN 978-2-915797-35-0., p. 223-235.
- ^ a b c d Léon Menabrea, «On the progress of historical studies in Savoy and Piedmont from the 14th century to the present day, and the further development of these studies», Mémoires, vol. IX, no 1, 1939, p. 348
- ^ a b c La Savoie de l'an mil à la Réforme 1984, pp. 299–300, « Le premier duc de Savoie (1416) ».
- ^ a b c d e Roger Devos, Bernard Grosperrin (1985). Histoire de la Savoie : La Savoie de la Réforme à la Révolution française (in French).
- ^ a b c d e Charles Buet, Les Ducs de Savoie aux XV and XVI siécles. Alfred Mame et Fils. Tours. 1878. General Books (2012)
- ^ This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Department of Homeland Security.
- ^ This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Department of Homeland Security.
- ^ a b c d e Guichonnet 1988, p. 396.
- ^ a b Jean de Pingon (1996). Savoie française, Histoire d'un pays annexé (in French).
- ^ a b c d Varaschin 2009, pp. 15–16.
- ^ Jacques Lovie, "Art et Histoire", within Colelctif, Savooie, écologie, économie, art, litérature, langua, histoire, traditions populaires, Christine Bonneton, 1978.
- ^ a b c Nouvelle encyclopédie de la Haute-Savoie 2007, p. 16-19 (Lire en ligne).
- ^ a b André Palluel-Guillard (sous la dir.) (1986). Histoire de la Savoie : La Savoie de Révolution française à nos jours, XIXe-XXe siècle (in French).
- ^ Guichonnet (1988, pp. 166, 394)
- ^ Guichonnet (1982, p. 163)
- ^ a b c "Fils de deux patries", Le Dauphiné libéré, 17 june 2008.
- ^ a b c Nouvelle encyclopédie de la Haute-Savoie 2007, p. 16-19 (read online).
- ^ a b Comby 1977, p. 129.
- ^ a b c Sorrel 2006, p. 404 (Lire en ligne).
- ^ a b c La Savoie de Révolution française à nos jours 1986, p. 354.
- ^ Claude Muller (2001). Les mystères du Dauphiné. Éditions De Borée. pp. 96–101. ISBN 978-2-84494-086-5..
- ^ a b La Savoie de Révolution française à nos jours 1986
- ^ a b Jacques Delperrié de Bayac, Le Royaume du maréchal – Histoire de la zone libre, Éditions Robert Laffont, 1975, p.14.
- ^ a b c d Jean-Yves Mariotte, A Perret (1979). Atlas historique de la Savoie. Paris.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Jules-Joseph Vernier (1993). Étude historique et géographique sur la Savoie (in French).
- ^ a b Grillet, Dictionnaire historique, littéraire et statistique des départements du Mon Blanc et du Léman, contenant l'histoire ancienne et moderne de la Savoie, 1807
- ^ a b The generation typology is the one accepted by planners, cited by Rémy Knafou (1978). Les Stations intégrées de sport d'hiver des Alpes françaises : l'aménagement de la montagne à la " française ". Masson. ISBN 978-2-225-49412-3. However, geographer Rémy Knafou simply presents the first three generations (the fourth did not exist when he published his book), stating "This is the most classic typology, the most commonly accepted by all" (p. 16).
- ^ Le Monde with AFP, "Réforme territoriale: la Savoie et la Haute Savoie veulent s'unir", Le Monde, 11 july 2014
- ^ Le Nouvel Observateur with AFP, "Adieu les deux Savoies, bonjour la Savoie Mont Blanc?", Le Nouvel Observateur, 11 july 2014
- ^ Conseil Savoie Mont Blanc (8 July 2016). "Conseil Savoie Mont Blanc - Communiqué de presse" (PDF). www.savoie.fr. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 August 2016. Retrieved 25 July 2016..
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{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link). - Michèle Brocard, Lucien Lagier-Bruno, André Palluel-Guillard (1984). Histoire des communes savoyardes: Aix-les-Bains et ses environs - Les Bauges - La Chartreuse - La Combe de Savoie - Montmélian (vol. 2) (in French). Roanne: Éditions Horvath. p. 463. ISBN 978-2-7171-0310-6.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link). - Michèle Brocard, Maurice Messiez-Poche, Pierre Dompnier (1983). Histoire des communes savoyardes: La Maurienne - Chamoux - La Rochette (vol. 3) (in French). Roanne: Éditions Horvath. p. 558. ISBN 978-2-7171-0289-5.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link). - Marius Hudry (1982). Histoire des communes savoyardes: Albertville et son arrondissement (vol. 4) (in French). Roanne: Éditions Horvath. p. 444. ISBN 978-2-7171-0263-5..
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{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link). - Henri Baud, Jean-Yves Mariotte (1980). Histoire des communes savoyardes: Le Chablais (in French). Éditions Horvath. p. 422. ISBN 978-2-7171-0099-0..
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