Arbouet-Sussaute

Arbouet-Sussaute (Basque: Arboti-Zohota) is a commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine of south-western France.

Arbouet-Sussaute

Arboti-Zohota
School (left) and Town Hall
Location of Arbouet-Sussaute
Arbouet-Sussaute
Arbouet-Sussaute
Coordinates: 43°22′17″N 1°00′00″W
CountryFrance
RegionNouvelle-Aquitaine
DepartmentPyrénées-Atlantiques
ArrondissementBayonne
CantonPays de Bidache, Amikuze et Ostibarre
IntercommunalityCA Pays Basque
Government
  Mayor (20082020) Éric Narbais-Jauréguy
Area
1
14.55 km2 (5.62 sq mi)
Population
 (2017-01-01)[1]
322
  Density22/km2 (57/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
64036 /64120
Elevation56–195 m (184–640 ft)
(avg. 105 m or 344 ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

The inhabitants of the commune are known as Arbotiar.[2][3]

Geography

Arbouet-Sussaute is located in the former province of Lower Navarre some 30 km south-east of Peyrehorade and 5 km north-east of Saint-Palais. The D933 road from Saint-Palais in the south-west passes north through the western part of the commune and continues to Osserain-Rivareyte. Access to the village is by the D134 road from the D29 in the north passing south through the village and the commune and continuing south to join the D11 just west of Domezain-Berraute. The intercity bus network of Pyrénées-Atlantiques currently has a stop on its route 865 which goes from Saint-Palais to Orthez. There is also the hamlet of Sussaute to the south-east of the village. A disused line of railway passes from the north to the south-west through the commune.[4]

Located in the Drainage basin of the Adour, the commune is traversed 3 by tributaries of the Bidouze: the Ruisseau de Récalde and the Lauhirasse and its tributary the Berd.

Historical places and hamlets

  • Achtokotcho
  • Ahutchunia
  • Alguria
  • Amensteya
  • Arbouet
  • Arosteguy
  • Arracouenia
  • Arracumbeheria
  • Arrain
  • Beheity[5]
  • Bel Air
  • Bellaix
  • Berhamborda
  • Bidetoua
  • Bordagnia
  • Celhay
  • Chapar
  • Church of Sussaute
  • Copaenia
  • Elgart
  • Etchart
  • Gallos
  • Hachgarat
  • Harambure
  • Idiartia
  • Iratchetoa
  • Joanconia
  • Lacounia
  • Landutchia
  • Larramendy
  • Laugueroteguia
  • Léchénia
  • Lessaho
  • Mendibure
  • Mendiscoua
  • Mendiskoborda
  • Mitchot
  • Ochaharretta
  • Orania
  • Oxobiçale
  • Pochulia
  • Putchetenia
  • Salanbeheria
  • Sallaberry[5]
  • Saspithurry
  • Sussaute
  • Urchamendy

Toponymy

The commune name in basque is Arboti-Zohota.[6]

According to Jean-Baptiste Orpustan Arboti is the spelling preserved in basque but the meaning is uncertain. If it is from the Latin (borrowed from arbor(e)), the name may signify a wooded place. For Zohota (Sussaute) he suggests a basque origin of zozoeta meaning "Place of blackbirds".[7]

The following table details the origins of the commune name and other names in the commune.

NameSpellingDateSourcePageOriginDescription
ArbouetArbet1119Orpustan
67
Village
Arbut1125Orpustan
67
Sanctus martinus de arbut1160Orpustan
67
Arbbet1268Orpustan
67
Arboet1316Orpustan
67
Arboet1350Orpustan
67
Arboet1413Orpustan
67
Arboet1472Raymond
9
Notaries
Arbuete1621Raymond
9
Biscay
Arbuet1621Raymond
9
Biscay
Arboüet1750Cassini
SussauteSansctus martinus de sosaute1160Orpustan
66
Village
Sosaute1219Orpustan
66
Sosaute1350Orpustan
66
Sosaute1384Raymond
165
Navarrenx
Sossaute1405Raymond
165
Navarrenx
Sossaute1413Orpustan
66
Susauta1513Raymond
165
Pamplona
Susaute1519Raymond
165
Mixe
Sußaute1750Cassini
Sussante1793Ldh/EHESS/Cassini
BeheityBéhéity1863Raymond
26
Hamlet
ÉlichetcheEliceche1621Raymond
58
BiscayFarm
EtcheverryEtcheverry1863Raymond
63
Fief falling under the Kingdom of Navarre
MauhouratMauhourat1863Raymond
110
BiscayHamlet
SallaberrySalaverri1621Raymond
153
BiscayFarm

Sources:

Origins:

History

The village of Sussaute was joined with Arbouet on 14 June 1842.[5]

Administration

List of Successive Mayors[14]

FromToNamePartyPosition
19952001Jean-Marie Larroque
20012020Éric Narbais-Jauréguy

(Not all data is known)

Inter-communality

The commune is part of six inter-communal structures:[15]

  • The Community of communes of Amikuze;
  • the AEP association of Mixe Country;
  • the Education regrouping association of Arbérats-Sillègue, Arbouet-Sussaute, Aroue, and Etcharry;
  • the Energy association of Pyrénées-Atlantiques;
  • the inter-communal association for the functioning of schools in Amikuze;
  • the association for the promotion of Basque culture.

Demography

In 1350 there were 11 fires in Sussaute.[16]

The fiscal census of 1412–1413,[17] made[18] on the orders of Charles III of Navarre, compared with the census of men and weapons that are in this Kingdom of Navarre below the ports in 1551[19] reveals a demography with strong growth. The first indicated the presence in Arbouet of 12 fires, the second with 31 (24 + 7 secondary fires). Similarly in Sussaute, the census of 1412-1413 had 7 fires while that of 1551 had 23 (19 + 4 side lights).

The census of the population of Lower Navarre in 1695[20] counted 52 fires in Arbouet and 50 in Sussaute.

In 2009 the commune had 280 inhabitants. The evolution of the number of inhabitants is known from the population censuses conducted in the commune since 1793. From the 21st century, a census of communes with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants is held every five years, unlike larger towns that have a sample survey every year.[Note 1]

Population change (See database)
1793 1800 1806 1821 1831 1836 1841 1846 1851
615 559 593 572 568 554 530 510 522
1856 1861 1866 1872 1876 1881 1886 1891 1896
479 495 504 475 461 654 502 480 444
1901 1906 1911 1921 1926 1931 1936 1946 1954
437 477 479 415 373 342 335 368 337
1962 1968 1975 1982 1990 1999 2006 2009 -
320 324 293 289 252 227 249 280 -
Population Graph

Economy

The commune is part of the Appellation d'origine contrôlée (AOC) zone of Ossau-iraty.

Culture and Heritage

Religious heritage

The Parish Church of Saint John the Baptist (1860) is registered as an historical monument.[21]

Amenities

Education

The school in Arbouet

The town has a kindergarten.

gollark: As ever.
gollark: I was ABSOLUTELY RIGHT.
gollark: Remember when I said you should call the project Macron?
gollark: (I know you have one)
gollark: Put it in your Macron folder.

See also

Notes

  1. At the beginning of the 21st century, the methods of identification have been modified by Law No. 2002-276 of 27 February 2002 Archived 6 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, the so-called "law of local democracy" and in particular Title V "census operations" allows, after a transitional period running from 2004 to 2008, the annual publication of the legal population of the different French administrative districts. For communes with a population greater than 10,000 inhabitants, a sample survey is conducted annually, the entire territory of these communes is taken into account at the end of the period of five years. The first "legal population" after 1999 under this new law came into force on 1 January 2009 and was based on the census of 2006.

References

  1. "Populations légales 2017". INSEE. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
  2. Brigitte Jobbé-Duval, Dictionary of placenames - Pyrénées-Atlantiques, 2009, Archives and Culture, ISBN 978-2-35077-151-9 (in French)
  3. Euskaltzaindia - Academy of the Basque language
  4. Google Maps
  5. Topographic Dictionary of the Department of Basses-Pyrenees, Paul Raymond, Imprimerie nationale, 1863, Digitised from Lyon Public Library 15 June 2011 (in French)
  6. Euskaltzaindia - Academy of the basque language
  7. New Basque Toponymy, Presses universitaires de Bordeaux, 2006, p. 66-67 ISBN 2 86781 396 4 (in French)
  8. Cassini Map 1750 – Arbouet-Sussaute
  9. Notaries of Labastide-Villefranche in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques (in French)
  10. Derecho de naturaleza que la merindad de San-Juan-del-pie-del-puerto, una de las seys de Navarra, tiene en Castilla, 1622 (in Spanish)
  11. Notaries of Navarrenx in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques (in French)
  12. Titles published by don José Yanguas y Miranda (in Spanish)
  13. Titles of Mixe in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques (in French)
  14. List of Mayors of France
  15. Inter-communality of Pyrénées-Atlantiques Archived 2014-02-22 at the Wayback Machine, Cellule informatique préfecture 64, consulted on 19 December 2011 (in French)
  16. Jean-Baptiste Orpustan, Collective work, Amikuze - the Mixe Country, Éditions Izpegi, 1992, ISBN 2 909262 05 7, page 77 (in French)
  17. Census cited by Manex Goyhenetche in his General History of Basque Country - Vol. 3, Elkarlanean, 2001, ISBN 2 9131 5634 7, page 26. The same work by Manex Goyhenetche indicated (page 284) that there were an average of 5.5 inhabitants per fire. (in French)
  18. Transcribed and published by Ricardo Cierbide, Censos de población de la Baja Navarra, Max Niemeyer Verlag, Tübingen, 1993 (in Spanish)
  19. Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques, E 575, transcribed by Louis Baratchart in The Friends of old Navarre, January 1995, pages 44-54 (in French)
  20. Bibliothèque nationale, 6956, Moreau register 979, cited by Manex Goyhenetche in General History of Basque Country - Vol. 3, Elkarlanean, 2001, ISBN 2 9131 5634 7, page 299. (in French)
  21. Ministry of Culture, Mérimée IA64000684 Parish Church of Saint John the Baptist (in French)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.