Last modified: 2015-04-04 by ivan sache
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Flag of the General Council of Hautes-Alpes - Image by Ivan Sache, 23 September 2009
See also:
Code: 05
Region: Provence-Alpes-Côte
d'Azur
Traditional province:
Dauphiné
Bordering departments:
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence,
Drôme,
Isère,
Savoie
Bordering country: Italy (Region
Piedmont)
Area: 5,549 km2
Population (2009): 130,752 inhabitants
Préfecture: Gap
Sous-préfecture: Briançon
Subdivisions: 2 arrondissements, 30 cantons, 177 communes.
The deparment is named "Upper-Alps" after the Alps
mountains.
The canton of Barcillonnette was transferred to the department from the department of Alpes-de-Haute-Provence in 1811.
The Treaty of Paris (10 February 1947), fixing the border between France and Italy, allocated Mount Thabor and Mount Chaberton to France, moving the border a few kilometers eastwards. General de Gaulle, then President of the Provisory Government, insisted so much on the annexation of Mount and Fort Chaberton that Georges Bidault, Minister of the Foreign Affairs, coined the word "chabertonisme", as the trend by the General to stick to insignificant details slowing down the negociation process between France and Italy.
Ivan Sache, 11 November 2009
As communicated by the General Council to Pascal Vagnat, the General
Council of Hautes-Alpes uses a white flag with the Council's logo in
the middle.
As explained by Dominique Cureau, the logo, unveiled on 29
September 2003, uses red and yellow shades to symbolize the
department's nickname, "The Latin Alps". The logo is made of a red
square with convex sides, featuring an ibex standing on a lavender
field, in front of a white mountain surmonted by a yellow sun. Below
is the writing "Hautes Alpes" (big black letters) / Conseil Geacute;néral (smaller, red letters).
Former flag of the General Council of Hautes-Alpes - Image by Ivan Sache, 23 September 2009
Before 2003, the General Council used a white flag with another logo, mostly blue, white and yellow.
Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 23 September 2009