The inhabitants of the commune are known as Beaujolais or Beaujolaises.[4]
Geography
Beaujeu is located some 30 km east of
Sisteron and 20 km north-east of
Digne-les-Bains at an altitude of 880 m. Access to the commune is by the D900 road from
Le Vernet in the north which passes through the length of the commune and continues south to Digne. The commune is rugged and mountainous.[5][6]
An enormous number of streams rise all over the commune which mostly converge on the Arigéol which flows south to join the
Bléone at
La Javie.[5][6]
The mountains around Beaujeu are composed of black
shale.
Relief
Blayeul Summit (2189 m) with a radio relay mast
Chappe summit (1667 m)
Col du Labouret (1240 m) on the D900 road
Environment
The commune has 2793
hectares of woods and forests - 61% of its area.[7]
Hamlets
Boullard
le Clucheret
l'Escale
Fonfrède
le Labouret
Saint-Pierre
les Traverses-Hautes
le Villard
Natural and technological risks
None of the 200 communes in the department is in a no seismic risk zone. Beaujeu is in zone 1b (low risk) according to the deterministic classification of 1991 and based on its seismic history and in zone 4 (medium risk) according to the probabilistic classification EC8 of 2011. Beaujeu also faces four other natural hazards:[8]
Avalanche
Forest fire
Flood (in the Arigéol valley)
Landslide
Beaujeu is also exposed to a risk of technological origin, namely the carriage of dangerous goods on the highway.[8]
There is no plan for prevention of foreseeable natural risks (PPR) for the commune and there is no DICRIM.[8]
The town has been subject to several natural disasters for flooding, mudslides, and landslides in 1986, 1994, and 1996.[9] The landslide on 18 May 1996 carried away two 20,000 volt power pylons.[10]
Toponymy
The term for the locality in 1147 comes from the Latin bellom jugum, meaning "beautiful mountain".[11][12] It then became Bèl jog, a confusion with the
Occitanbèl joc which means beau jeu in French.[11]
The name of the hamlet Clucheret seems to come from its status as a parish which would have earned it the name of Clocher (Bell tower).[13]
The name of the Chappe summit (1667 m) which borders
Prads-Haute-Bléone is in memory of the existence of a
semaphore visual telegraph relay station called telegraph Chappe after
Claude Chappe who designed it in 1794.
Beaujeu appears as Beaujou on the 1750
Cassini Map[14] and as Beaujun on the 1790 version.[15]
History
In
Ancient times the Bodiontici populated the
Bléone valley as well as the
Gauls who lived in the current commune of Beaujeu. The Bodiontici were defeated by
Augustus at the same time as the other people present on the
Tropaeum Alpium before 14 BC. The commune was attached to the province of
Alpes-Maritimes at the time of its creation.[16]
According to an inventory of the property of the
Abbey of St. Victor, Marseille, the abbey are owned several
tenures and bergeries among which la Bouisse, Champ Premier, la Sébière, and Auche can be identified. Later there were three distinct communities, each with its church at Beaujeu, Le Clucheret, and Saint-Pierre-des-Auches. The Church of Saint Peter was originally built higher and the priory depended on the
Augustinian Abbey of
Valence.[13][17]
The locality appears for the first time in charters of 1147 (Beljog),[18] and a
Motte-and-bailey castle was built in the 11th century at a place called La Tour.[19]
The barony of Beaujeu extended over the communities of Mariaud and Clucheiret.[20] A toll was established on the Col de Labouret road at the end of the
Middle Ages.[21]
In 1309, William of Roumoules was reported as lord of
Roumoules, Beaujeu,
Bédéjun,
Bras-d'Asse,
Entrages,
Majastres,
Vergons, and
Estoublon.[22] The death of Queen
Joanna I of Naples reopened a crisis of succession to head the county of Provence and the cities of the Union of Aix (1382-1387) supported
Charles, Duke of Durazzo, against
Louis I of Anjou. The lord of Beaujeu and Mariaud, Gui Saint-Marcial, supported the Duke of Anjou in spring 1382, this support being conditional on the participation of the Duke in the relief expedition for the Queen.[23]
During the
French Revolution the commune had a patriotic society, founded after the end of 1792.[24]
The
French coup d'état of 1851 committed by
Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte against the
French Second Republic provoked an armed uprising in the Lower Alps in defence of the Constitution. After the failure of the uprising there was a severe crackdown on those who stood up to defend the Republic which included one inhabitant of Beaujeu.[25]
As with many communes in the department Beaujeu had a school well before the
Jules Ferry laws. In 1775 it already has a school that opened in winter.[13] In 1863 there were four: in the main village and in remote villages (Saint-Pierre, Boulard, and Fontfrède), which provided primary education for boys. No instruction was given to girls: neither the
Falloux Laws (1851), which required the opening of a girls' school in communes of over 800 inhabitants nor the first Duruy Law (1867), which lowers the threshold to 500 inhabitants, concerned Beaujeu. The subsidies from the second Duruy Act (1877) were used to build a new school and remodel another. It was only with the Ferry laws that the girls of Beaujeu were regularly educated.[26]
In 2017 the workforce was 71 people, including 9 unemployed. These people were mostly employees (82%) and most worked outside the commune (78%).[30] At the end of 2015 there were a total of 12 business enterprises in the commune: 6 in agriculture, 1 in construction, 2 in trade, transport, and services, and 3 in Administration, education, health, or social services. 3 Agricultural enterprises and one administrative establishment employed staff.[30]
According to the Departmental Observatory of Tourism, tourism is important for the commune with between one and five tourists accommodated per capita. In the total absence of any housing facilities these are second homes that can accommodate tourists. (the 42 second homes account for over a third of the communal housing and have 208 beds).[31]
Culture and heritage
There were two coaching inns on the Labouret road, one in the village and one at the foot of the pass whose slope was very difficult.[32]
Religious heritage
The Chapel of Saint-Blaise at Clucheret contains three items that are registered as historical objects:
^Ministry of Ecology, sustainable development, transport and lodgings,
Communal NoticeArchived 2015-12-23 at the
Wayback Machine on the Gaspar database, online 27 May 2011, consulted on 2 July 2012
^Philippe Dubernard, "Rain, power outages, emergencies, and morale", La Provence, 19 May 2013, p. 5 (in French)
^Bénédicte Fénié, Jean-Jacques Fénié, Provençal Toponymy, Éditions Sud-Ouest, 2002 (reprint),
ISBN978-2-87901-442-5, p. 84 (in French)
^
abcDaniel Thiery, «
Beaujeu », On the origins of rural churches and chapels of Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, published 13 December 2010, online 19 December 2010, consulted on 2 July 2012 (in French)
^Michel de La Torre, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence: the complete guide to 200 communes, Paris, Deslogis-Lacoste, coll. "Towns and villages of France", 1989, Relié, 72 p. (non-paginated) (
ISBN2-7399-5004-7)
^Natural Park of Luberon, Around the First millennium in Forcalquier Country, exposition catalogue, 2007, p. 31. (in French)
^Under the direction of Édouard Baratier, Georges Duby, and Ernest Hildesheime, Historical Atlas. Provence, Venaissin County, Principality of Orange, County of Nice, Principality of Monaco, Paris, Librairie Armand Colin, 1969 (BNF FRBNF35450017h), p. 164 (in French)
^Louis Stouff, "Map 86: Port, routes and fairs of the 13th to 15th century", in Baratier, Duby & Hildesheimer, Historical Atlas. Provence, Venaissin County, Principality of Orange, County of Nice, Principality of Monaco, Paris, Librairie Armand Colin, 1969 (BNF FRBNF35450017h).
^Patrice Alphand, "The Patriotic Societies", The Revolution in the Lower Alps, Annals of Haute-Provence, bulletin de la société scientifique et littéraire des Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, No. 307, 1st Trimester 1989, 108th year, p. 296-298. (in French)
^Henri Joannet, Jean-Pierre Pinatel, "Arrests-Condemnations", 1851 - For the record, Les Mées: Les Amis des Mées, 2001, p. 72. (in French)
^Jean-Christophe Labadie (director), The Schoolhouses, Digne-les-Bains, Departmental Archives of Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, 2013,
ISBN978-2-86-004-015-0, p. 9-18.