Wikipedia:

Béziers

Commune of Béziers
CathedraleBeziers.jpg
St. Nazaire Cathedral and Pont Vieux in Béziers

Location
Coordinates 43,35° N 3,25° E
Administration
Country France
Region Languedoc-Roussillon
Department Hérault (sous-préfecture)
Arrondissement Béziers
Canton Chief town of 4 cantons
Intercommunality Communauté
d'agglomération
Béziers Méditerranée
Mayor Raymond Couderc
Statistics
Altitude 4 m–120 m
(avg. 17 m)
Land area¹ 95.48 km²
Population²
(1999)
69,153
 - Density 724.2/km² (1999)
Miscellaneous
INSEE/Postal code 340032/ 34500
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
2 Population sans doubles comptes: single count of residents of multiple communes (e.g. students and military personnel).
France

Béziers (Besièrs in Occitan, and Besiers in Catalan) is a town in Languedoc, in the southwest of France. It is a commune and a sous-préfecture in the Hérault département, with a population around 78,000,[1] called Biterrois. Béziers hosts the famous Feria du Béziers, centred around bullfighting, every August. A million visitors are attracted to the five-day event.[2]

Geography

The town is located on a small bluff above the river Orb, about 10 km from the Mediterranean Sea. At Béziers the Canal du Midi spans the river Orb as an aqueduct called the pont-canal ('canal bridge'). claimed to be the first of its kind.[3]

History

The site has been occupied since Neolithic times, before the influx of Celts. Roman Betarra was on the road that linked Provence with Iberia. The Romans refounded the city as a new colonia for veterans in 36/35 BCE and called it Colonia Julia Baeterrae Septimanorum. Stones from the Roman amphitheatre were used to construct the city wall during the 3rd century.

White wine was exported to Rome; two dolia discovered in an excavation near Rome are marked, one "I am a wine from Baeterrae and I am five years old," the other simply "white wine of Baeterrae". She was occupied by Moors between 720 and 752.

During the 10th through 12th centuries Béziers was the center of a Viscountship of Béziers. The viscounts ruled most of the coastal plain around the city, including also the city of Agde. They also controlled the major east-west route through Languedoc, roughly following the old Roman Via Domitia, with the two key bridges over the Orb at Béziers and over the Hérault at Saint-Thibéry.

After the death of viscount William around 990, the viscounty passed to his daughter Garsendis and her husband, count Raimond-Roger of Carcassonne (d. ~1012). It was then ruled by their son Peter-Raimond (d. ~1060) and his son Roger (d. 1067), both of whom were also count of Carcassonne.

Roger died without children and Béziers passed to his sister Ermengard and her husband Raimond-Bertrand Trencavel. The Trencavels were to rule for the next 142 years, until the Albigensian Crusade - a formal 'Crusade' (holy war) authorised by Pope Innocent III.

Béziers was a Languedoc stronghold of Catharism, which the Catholic Church condemned as heretical and which Catholic forces extirpated in the Albigensian Crusade. Béziers was the first city to be sacked, on July 22, 1209. Béziers' Catholics were given the opportunity to leave before the Crusaders besieged the city. However, they refused and fought with the Cathars. In a sortie outside the walls, their combined force was defeated, and pursued back into town. In the bloody massacre which followed, no one was spared, not even those who took refuge in the churches. The commander of the crusade was the Papal Legate Arnaud-Amaury (or Arnald Amalaricus, Abbot of Citeaux). When asked by a Crusader how to tell Catholics from Cathars once they'd taken the city, the abbot famously replied, "Kill them all, God will know His own" - "Neca eos omnes. Deus suos agnoscet". (This phrase can only be found in one source, Caesarius of Heisterbach; along with a story of some Cathars who desecrated a copy of the Old Testament and threw it from the town's walls.)

The invaders fired the cathedral of Saint Nazaire, which collapsed on those who had taken refuge inside. The town was pillaged, and burnt. None were left alive. (A plaque opposite the cathedral records the 'Day of Butchery' perpetrated by the 'northern barons'.) A few parts of the Romanesque cathedral St-Nazaire survived, and repairs started in 1215. The restoration, along with that of the rest of the city, continued until the 15th century.

In the repression following Louis Napoléon's coup d'état in 1851, troops fired on and killed Republican protestors in Béziers. Others were condemned to death or transported to Guyana, including a former mayor who died at sea attempting to escape from there. In the Place de la Révolution a plaque and a monument by Jean Antoine Injalbert commemorates these events. (Injalbert also designed the Fontaine du Titan in Béziers' Plâteau des Poètes park and the Molière monument in nearby Pézenas.)

Ecclesiastical history

Coat of Arms of Béziers
Enlarge
Coat of Arms of Béziers

Local traditions assign as the first Bishop of Béziers the Egyptian saint, Aphrodisius, said to have sheltered the Holy Family at Hermopolis and to have become a Christian, also said to have accompanied Sergius Paulus to Gaul to found the Church of Narbonne. He allegedly died a martyr at Béziers.

Local traditions had St. Aphrodisius arrive at Béziers mounted on a camel. Hence the custom of leading a mechanical camel in the procession at Béziers on the feast of the saint. The camel was burned during the Wars of Religion and again during the French Revolution. The custom was revived in 1803 only to be discontinued during the Revolution of 1830, when it was considered a symbol of feudalism and religious fanaticism. Today, it continues to run through the city's streets during local holidays. The current head dates from the eighteenth century. In the 1970s, it was proposed that the camel be remade to give it a real camel's appearance. However, the townspeople protested and the camel retained its traditional appearance.[4]

The first historically known bishop is Paulinus mentioned in 418; St. Guiraud was Bishop of Béziers from 1121 to 1123; St. Dominic refused the episcopal see of Béziers in order to devote himself to supporting the Albigensian Crusade, which exterminated the Cathars.

Among the fifteen synods held at Béziers was that of 356 held by Saturninus of Arles, an Arian archbishop, which condemned St. Hilary. Later synods of 1233, 1246 and 1255 condemned the Cathars.

A Papal Brief of 16 June 1877, authorized the bishops of Montpellier to call themselves bishops of Montpellier, Béziers, Agde, Lodève and Saint-Pons, in memory of the different dioceses united in the present Diocese of Montpellier.

Economy

Today Béziers is a principal center of the Languedoc viticulture and winemaking industries.

Transport

The A9 autoroute passes through Béziers. The final link in the A75 autoroute from Pezenas will be complete within a few years and provide direct links with Clermont-Ferrand and Paris.

Béziers-Agde-Vias Airport, owned by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry, currently provides daily direct flights to Paris, Orly. Following an extension to the runway which was completed in March 2007, it is expected that a low-cost airline will offer flights to the United Kingdom and Germany, although as of October 2007 there has been no announcement.

Miscellaneous

  • Inhabitants of Béziers are known as Biterrois (male) or Biterroises (female), after Baeterrea, the Roman name for the town.
  • Béziers also hosts annual Languedocienne Sea-Joustes in the summer.
  • The nearby Étang de Montady, a marsh drained in 1247, is a unique field and irrigaton system which is visible from the Oppidum d'Ensérune. Plots radiate out from the centre where channels that drain the land empty into a collector. The water is carried away by an aqueduct that passes under the hill to the floor of the old Capestang lake, itself drained in the 19th century.

Births

Béziers was the birthplace of:

Cultural references

Twin towns

See also

References

  1. ^ The Green Guide Languedoc Roussillon Tarn Gorges - Michelin Travel Publications 2007
  2. ^ Beziers Tourist Site
  3. ^ Beyond.fr Tourist Site
  4. ^ http://www.sunnyfrance.net/histoiredebeziers/camel_UK.htm

External links

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