Last modified: 2019-04-13 by ivan sache
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History of Guyenne (Aquitaine)
Aquitania (from Latin, aqua, "water") was divided in
three provinces by the Romans. Clovis incorporated them to the Kingdom of the Franks in 507 after having defeated in
Vouillé Alaric II, King of the Visigoths. Aquitaine was
then a Duchy, whose most famous duke was St. William the Great (c.
755-812), also Count of Toulouse, who stopped the Moors and retired in the abbey of Gellone he had founded (known today as Saint-Guilhem-le-Désert). William became the hero of several medieval chansons de geste, as Guillaume au Court-Nez (Short Nose).
Charlemagne made of Aquitaine a Kingdom in 781, which lasted until
827. Aquitaine was later a Duchy, ruled by the
Poitou dynasty (William III
Towhead, 951-963; Wiiliam IV Fierebrace, 963-994;
William IX the Troubadour, 1086-1127; William X the Saint,
1127-1137).
In 1137, Crown Prince of France Louis, later King Louis VII,
married Eleanor of Aquitaine and incorporated her
Duchy to France. The unique daughter of William
X, Eleanor brought as her dowry not only Aquitaine but also
Périgord, Limousin,
Poitou,
Angoumois,
Saintonge, Gascony,
and the suzereignty over Auvergne and the
County of Toulouse.
In 1152, Eleanor, repudiated by Louis VII, remarried
with Henry II Plantagenet, Count of Anjou
and later King of England (1154). Aquitaine was therefore
incorporated to the Angevin Empire. The French Capetian kings
were able to reincorporate Aquitaine to their domain for only short
periods in 1294 (Philippe IV the Handsome), 1324 (Charles IV the Handsome) and 1369 (Charles V the Wise).
The Hundred Years' War began in
Aquitaine in 1345. By the Treaty of Brétigny (8 May 1360), Aquitaine
was given to the English, who called it Guyenne and created a
Principality there in 1362. In 1380, the English possessions were
reduced to the surroundings of Bordeaux and
Bayonne. In 1453, the Bureau brothers defeated the English troops led
by Talbot in the last battle of the Hundred Years' War, fought in Castillon-la-Bataille, near Bordeaux. In 1469, King Louis XI granted
Guyenne to his younger brother Charles as his
apanage. Guyenne was eventually
incorporated to the Royal domain in 1472.
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2003
Flag of Guyenne
Flag of Guyenne - Image by Arnaud Leroy, 1 February 2003
The flag of Guyenne is a banner of the arms "Gules, a lion passant gardant or", assigned to the province by Jacques Meurgey in his Notice historique sur les blasons des anciennes provinces de France (Historical note on the coats of arms of the ancient French provinces, 1941).
Meurgey debunks the myth linking the leopards of Guyenne and England. The arms of Guyenne are said to date back to the ancient Kingdom of Aquitaine. When Eleanor of Aquitaine married Henry II, Duke of Normandy, she transferred Guyenne to England. The arms of England would have then be made of the two leopards of Aquitaine and Normandy. Max Prinet and Meaudre de Lapuyade have proven that this theory is wrong.
Ivan Sache, 14 June 2009
History of Gascony
The original name of Gascony is Vasconia. An ancient Iberian people, the Vascons settled between the Pyrenees mountains and river Ebro.
Repelled by the Visigoths, they settled in the plains located north of
the Pyrenees. The Vascons gave their name to the
Gascons and the Basques, to Gascony and to Biscay.
In 778, Charlemagne established the Duchy of Aquitaine. In the south, the
Duchy of Gascony, established in 872, was
rapidly dismembered into several feudal states, including the
Counties of Armagnac, Fezensac, Astarac, Gaure, and Pardiac, and the Viscounties of Fezensaguet and Lomagne.
In the 11th century, Gascony was incorporated into
Aquitaine (or Guyenne) and formed with it the
province of Guyenne-et-Gascogne. Sources do not agree on the
process and year of incorporation.
GASO said that Bernard of Armagnac took over the whole Gascony in 1069 but was defeated the next year by Duke William VIII of Aquitaine. The Grand Larousse
Illustré du XXe Siècle says that when Duke
Béranger died in 1036, Gascony was transfered to his nephew
Odo, Count of Poitou and Duke of
Aquitaine. The Guide Vert Michelin says that the Duchies of
Aquitaine and Gascony merged in 1058.
Ivan Sache, 28 January 2003
Flag of Gascony
Flag of Gascony - Image by Arnaud Leroy, 28 January 2003
The flag of Gascony is a banner of the arms "Quarterly, 1. and 4. Azure a lion rampant argent, 2. and 3. Gules a garb or".
In his Notice historique sur les blasons des anciennes provinces de France (Historical note on the coats of arms of the ancient French provinces, 1941), Jacques Meurgey assigns to the province "Quarterely 1. and 4. Argent a lion gules, 2. and 3. Gules a garb or tied azure", presenting the arms used on the modern flag as a "variant".
Anyway, these arms, ascribed to the province in the Armorial Général, do not have the least historical value, since Gascony was never a feudal domain worth bearing a coat of arms.
Ivan Sache, 14 June 2009
Proposed flag of Gascony
Proposed flag of Gascony - Image by Ivan Sache, 23 January 2019
An alternative to the banner of arms assigned to Gascony by Jacques
Meurgey was proposed in 2015 by the association "Région Gascogne
Prospective" (formerly, "Conservatoire du Patrimoine de Gascogne").
The flag (photo,
photo) is divided white-red along the descending diagonal and charged in the center with the Venus of Brassempouy.
The red triangle represents the Gascon territory. The Venus of
Brassempouy personifies the population. The white and red evokes the
cultural heritage.
Several other designs are shown as proposals on the association's
website; that one appears to be the only one existing in the cloth.
[La Daune, emblème gascon, 12 October 2015]
The Venus of Brassempouy (French, Dame de Brassempouy; Gascon, Daune),
aka the Lady with the Hood, is a 3.65 cm high statuette, dated c. 21000
BC. Sculpted in the core of a mammoth's tusk, the Venus is the "first
human face", that is, the oldest known representation of a human face.
The statuette is interpreted as a symbolic image of women, not a
specific representation.
[La "Dame à la Capuche"]
The Venus of Brassempouy was found in 1892 with another eight feminine
statuettes in the Pope's Cave, Brassempouy (Landes). Édouard Piette, an
amateur paleontologist, excavated from 1891 to 1897 the prehistoric
caves of Gourdan, Lortet, Arudy, Mas d'Azil and Brassempouy, all located
in the south-west of France. In 1904, he refused to sell his collection,
in spite of having self-funded all his research, and offered it to the
Museum of National Antiques, today the Museum of National Archeology (which uses a stylized version of the Venus of Brassempouy as its emblem), housed in the former royal castle of Saint-Germain-en-Laye. Piette required his collection to be presented in a dedicated room, according to his own classification, and should never be modified. The restoration performed one century later respected his will.
[La collection Édouard Piette]
Ivan Sache, 23 January 2019
In several villages of Dordogne, a tall pinetree trunk is erected in front of the house of a representative (usually a member of the Municipal Council). All branches are cut, excepted the uppermost ones, which are eventually replaced with green ones if they die. Tricolour flags (often a pair) are added on the top of the "mast", where they flank a rectangular shield, with a tricolour border and the words "Honneur à notre élu" (Honour to our representative). The same kind of mast can be seen in front the municipal building (not the Town Hall, but a building where the inhabitants can meet), with several flags and the words "Honneur à nos élus" (Honour to our representatives). In front of a restaurant, whose owner was municipal councellor, the words can be "Honneur au patron" (Honour to the landlord).
Ivan Sache, 30 May 1999