Neufchâteau, Vosges

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Neufchâteau
The Church of St. Nicolas
The Church of St. Nicolas
Coat of arms of Neufchâteau
Coat of arms
Location of Neufchâteau
Neufchâteau is located in France
Neufchâteau
Neufchâteau
Coordinates: 48°21′23″N 5°41′47″E / 48.3564°N 5.6964°E / 48.3564; 5.6964Coordinates: 48°21′23″N 5°41′47″E / 48.3564°N 5.6964°E / 48.3564; 5.6964
CountryFrance
RegionGrand Est
DepartmentVosges
ArrondissementNeufchâteau
CantonNeufchâteau
IntercommunalityCC Ouest Vosgien
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2026) Simon Leclerc[1]
Area
1
23.81 km2 (9.19 sq mi)
Population
 (Jan. 2018)[2]
6,642
 • Density280/km2 (720/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
88321 /88300
Elevation274–373 m (899–1,224 ft)
(avg. 289 m or 948 ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Neufchâteau (French pronunciation: ​[nøʃato] or [nœfʃato] (About this soundlisten)) is a commune in the Vosges department in Grand Est in northeastern France.

Inhabitants are called Néocastriens.

Geography[]

Positioned at the confluence of the Rivers Meuse and Mouzon, the little town dominates the Vosges Plain. It is at the centre of the various communications channels in the south-west of Grand Est, connecting with the région of Champagne to the west.

The A31 Autoroute loops around the east side of Neufchâteau, approximately 20 kilometres (12 mi) away at its closest point. Four junctions are available according to subsequent destination, these being numbered 8.1, 9, 10 and 11 and being located respectively at Robécourt, Bulgnéville, Châtenois and Colombey-les-Belles.

National Road RN74 (in parts downgraded following autoroute network development to Departmental Road RD674) passes through Neufchâteau en route from Nancy in the north-east to Dijon further to the south-west.

The town is on a main railway line connecting with Metz, Nancy, Dijon, Lyon and the south. For a year, in 2006/07, it also found itself a stop on the TGV line to Nice, though the opening of a more direct line put an end to that.

History[]

One of the oldest towns in Lorraine, Neufchâteau was known as Noviomagus during the Roman period, when it was a market town along the Pretorian road connecting Lyon with Trier. Other names from this period include Noviomagus and Neomagus, which had mutated to Novum Castrum by 1094 when Thierry, son of the Duke Gérard I constructed a castle here.

Writing in the twelfth century, Hugues Metellus described the town in his poem "Garin le Lohérain" as "large and well populated, with a large fortress and abundant wealth" (« grande et bien peuplée, ayant un chastel principal, des biens en abondance »). It contained all the ingredients necessary for a good time, including musicians, jugglers and actors. In 1231 Neufchâteau was the first town in Lorraine to receive town privileges. Duke Matthew II granted Neufchâteau a charter which included the right to appoint thirteen people to undertake the functions of a jury, and to elect a mayor. The town was regularly chosen to host conferences convened in order to settle differences arising between Lorraine and France. It was also to Neufchâteau that the Duchess of Lorraine, at this time the regent on behalf of her infant son, called a meeting of the Estates General in 1545.

The final decades of the neighbouring Duchy of Burgundy had been a particularly troubled period for Lorraine, and as a principal administrative centre, Neufchâteau had been badly hit by the fighting, being invaded and occupied by a Burgundian garrison in 1436 and again in 1476.

After the fall of Burgundy, French influence over Lorraine turned into control. Richelieu saw to the destruction of the town walls at Neufchâteau, which became formally French along with the rest of Lorraine in 1766 with the death of Duke Stanislas. Three decades later, with the new administrative structure introduced across France in the aftermath of the revolution, the town found itself the capital of the Vosges arrondissement. Such was its importance that at the height of the revolutionary fervour it lost its name, mutating from Neufchâteau to Mouzon-Meuse. The town regained its former name as the political temperature cooled, but during the ensuing two centuries it found itself occupied by foreign troops during the Napoleonic Wars, during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, and more recently during the Second World War.

During the final decades of the nineteenth century and the early ones of the twentieth, Neufchâteau was home to an equestrian Republican Guard (France) brigade.[citation needed]

On 19 June 1940 around 100 French soldiers, most of them members of the Twelfth Regiment of Senegalese Fusiliers were shot by German troops in a barn near to Neufchâteau.[citation needed]

In 1965 the commune merged with those of adjacent Noncourt and of Rouceux.

More recently the town hit the headlines when it became the first French commune to renounce its water treatment contract with a large multinational organisation, and take water management back into municipal control.[citation needed]

Heraldry[]

Blason Neufchateau.svgBlason Neufchateau ancien.svg

Current (left) and former (right) coats of arms of Neufchâteau.

Twin towns[]

  • Germany Hamm, Germany, since 1975 formerly with the now incorporated municipality Herringen since 1967
  • Portugal Miranda do Corvo, Portugal, since 1997
  • Poland Smigiel, Poland, since 2001

Neufchâteau was part of the 1998 summit of worldwide cities named "New Castle" with:

Germany Neuburg an der Donau, Germany
Switzerland Neuchâtel, Switzerland
France Neufchâteau, Vosges, France
United States New Castle, Delaware, USA
United States New Castle, Indiana, USA
United States New Castle, Pennsylvania, USA
England Newcastle-under-Lyme, England
England Newcastle upon Tyne, England
South Africa Newcastle, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Japan Shinshiro, Japan

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Répertoire national des élus: les maires". data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises (in French). 2 December 2020. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  2. ^ "Populations légales 2018". INSEE. 28 December 2020.

External links[]


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