Brissarthe

Brissarthe is a former commune in the Maine-et-Loire department in western France. On 15 December 2016, it was merged into the new commune Les Hauts-d'Anjou.[2]

Brissarthe
The church in Brissarthe
Location of Brissarthe
Brissarthe
Brissarthe
Coordinates: 47°42′06″N 0°26′57″W
CountryFrance
RegionPays de la Loire
DepartmentMaine-et-Loire
ArrondissementSegré
CantonTiercé
CommuneLes Hauts-d'Anjou
Area
1
16.99 km2 (6.56 sq mi)
Population
 (2017)[1]
627
  Density37/km2 (96/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal code
49330
Elevation17–78 m (56–256 ft)
(avg. 23 m or 75 ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Population

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1793 1,052    
1800 974−7.4%
1806 995+2.2%
1821 1,006+1.1%
1831 1,061+5.5%
1836 1,012−4.6%
1841 1,020+0.8%
1846 1,024+0.4%
1851 1,018−0.6%
1856 1,035+1.7%
1861 997−3.7%
1866 986−1.1%
1872 904−8.3%
1876 920+1.8%
1881 860−6.5%
1886 840−2.3%
1891 849+1.1%
1896 805−5.2%
1901 762−5.3%
1906 793+4.1%
1911 777−2.0%
1921 638−17.9%
1926 643+0.8%
1931 653+1.6%
1936 619−5.2%
1946 633+2.3%
1954 622−1.7%
1962 645+3.7%
1968 621−3.7%
1975 519−16.4%
1982 514−1.0%
1990 521+1.4%
1999 528+1.3%
2006 599+13.4%
2009 626+4.5%
gollark: TF-IDF is dead, and bad users and/or the desire for more efficient search has killed it, at least in some contexts.
gollark: They aren't, though. Also this is actually quite helpful even then.
gollark: This is similar technology to what Minoteaur™ (or, well, the Minoteaur™ test search engine) uses.
gollark: https://blog.google/products/search/search-language-understanding-bert/
gollark: I mean, search engine literacy is becoming less important, as the search engines are adapting to the imprecise and noisy queries people actually enter.

See also

References



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