词条 | Fontaine-de-Vaucluse |
释义 |
|name = Fontaine-de-Vaucluse |commune status = Commune |image = Fontaine de Vaucluse.jpg |caption = The village of Fontaine-de-Vaucluse, with the river in the foreground |image coat of arms = Blason ville fr Fontaine-de-Vaucluse (Vaucluse).svg |arrondissement = Avignon |canton = L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue |INSEE = 84139 |postal code = 84800 |mayor = Christian Tallieux |term = 2001–2008 |intercommunality = Pays des Sorgues et des Monts de Vaucluse |coordinates = {{coord|43.9231|5.127|format=dms|display=inline,title}} |elevation m = 80 |elevation min m = 68 |elevation max m = 652 |area km2 = 7.14 |population = 643 |population date = 2015 }}Fontaine-de-Vaucluse (La Fònt de Vauclusa or simply Vauclusa in Occitan) is a commune in the Vaucluse department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in southeastern France. The name Vaucluse comes from the Latin phrase vallis clausa or "closed valley".[1] HeraldryThe coat of arms of the village of Fontaine-de-Vaucluse is: "Blue, with a Trout and a Grayling, poised horizontally." (Malte-Brun, in France Illustrated, book V, 1884) GeographyFontaine-de-Vaucluse ("spring of Vaucluse") is built around the Fontaine de Vaucluse, a spring in a valley at the foot of the Vaucluse Mountains, between Saumane and Lagnes, not far from L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue. It is named after the spring, the source of the River Sorgue.[1] HydrographyThe fountain, or spring, of Vaucluse, situated at the feet of a steep limestone cliff 230 metres high, is the biggest spring in France. It is also the fifth largest in the world with an annual flow of 630 million cubic metres.{{ref|Georges Truc, L'eau en Vaucluse. Origine, fonctionnement, potentiel et qualité des réservoirs aquifères, Éd. Conseil Général de Vaucluse, Avignon, 1991 p 29}} The fountain of Vaucluse surges in March for about 5 weeks and then subsides. The increased flow of water swells the Sorgue to flood. The mechanism behind the surging remains somewhat of a mystery.[2] HistoryThis village of 600 inhabitants was once called Vaucluse or the closed valley (Vallis Clausa in Latin) and it gave its name to the French department of Vaucluse. Several trails indicate human occupation in the area since the neolithic era. Its spring has been the object of a major cult since Antiquity, and the Sorgue was used as a trade route by the Phoenicians of Massalia and later the Romans. Following some major discoveries from two cave dives by the SSFV, two archaeological sites under the protection of the SRA PACA has allowed more than 1600 antique coins from the first century BC to the 5th century AD to be brought back up to the surface. In the Middle Ages, a hermit supposedly lived in the spot. Eventually, he performed miracles that led to his being consecrated as Bishop of Cavaillon. His successor, Walcaudus, received the consent of the ruling counts of the area to settle monks there. A monastery was constructed, but was ruined by the 11th century. Clement, the Bishop of Cavaillon, ordered its reconstruction by Isarn, abbot of Sainte-Victoire. The poet Petrarch made it his preferred residence in the 14th century, writing, "The illustrious source of the Sorgue, famous for itself long ago, became even more famous by my long stay and my songs." (Petrarch, Seniles, X, 2). The poet left in 1353 after his son's death. The village was razed shortly afterward by bandits, who withdrew at the sight of the intimidating episcopal seat. A museum stands on the spot of Petrarch's house today, and the town is twinned with Arquà Petrarca, where the poet died. Following this attack, the village and valley fell into oblivion. Thought of as a wild place, it was avoided through the 16th and 17th centuries. Vaucluse was again popularized by a duel between the famous Honore Gabriel Riqueti and Louis-Francois de Galliffet. A letter published by Riqueti brought fame to the area again, and a column was built to honour Petrarch in the eighteenth century. In 1946, Jacques Cousteau and another diver were almost killed while searching for the bottom of the spring. An air compressor used to fill their tanks had taken in its own exhaust fumes and produced carbon monoxide--nearly killing them before they could return to the surface from a depth of approximately 100 meters. DemographicsHistorical population:{{Citation needed|date=October 2017}} {{Historical populations|state=collapsed |1962 | 615 |1968 | 698 |1975 | 532 |1982 | 604 |1990 | 580 |1999 | 610 |2006 | 671 |2007 | 681 |2008 | 690 |2013 | 645 |2015 | 643 }} Places and monuments
Personalities
GalleryReferences
1. ^1 {{Cite book|title=Natural Wonders of the World|publisher=Reader's Digest Association, Inc|year=1980|isbn=0-89577-087-3|editor-last=Scheffel|editor-first=Richard L.|location=United States of America|pages=396|quote=|editor-last2=Wernet|editor-first2=Susan J.|via=}} 2. ^{{Cite book|title = The Silent World|last = Cousteau|first = Jean|publisher = Harper & Row. Publishers|year = 1950|isbn = |location = |pages = }} External links{{Commons category|Fontaine de Vaucluse}}
3 : Communes of Vaucluse|Springs of France|Landforms of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur |
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