Last modified: 2012-05-17 by ivan sache
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Municipal flag of Valbonne - Image by Arnaud Leroy, 28 July 2004
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The municipality of Valbonne (12,630 inhabitants; 1,897 ha) is located on the eponymic plateau in the countryside just inland from Antibes and Cannes, on the French Riviera. Valbonne is not a typical Provencal village built on a rocky spur and with narrow, steep and twisting streets. Rather, the old village of Valbonne was built on a flat area and according to a rectangular plan.
There was probably no significant human settlement in Valbonne until
the end of the 12th century, when a monk called Guillaume found there
the St. Mary's abbey in a small valley watered by the rivers Brague and
Merlet. The place was called Vallis Bona (the good valley), later
Valbonne.
The founder of the abbey belonged to the Chalaisian order, once
successful and today totally forgotten. In 1101, Bishop of Grenoble
Hugues de Châteauneuf founded an hermitage for a few monks near the
village of Chalais. The hermitage was located north of the town of
Voreppe, on the southern foothills of the Chartreuse massif, at an
elevation of 940 m. Hugues' goal was to restore the Benedictine rule in
an hermitage structure. The only source of income of the first hermits
was forestry and sheep-breeding.
In 1110, the monks decided to abandon Chalais because they were too
poor and could not stand the competition with the powerful Carthusians
established in the Chartreuse massif. Count of Albon convince them to
stay in Chalais and ensured them "peace and safety" by funding and
protecting them. The local context became more favourable to Chalais,
which became an abbey in 1124 and was officially placed under the
protection of Pope Honorius II in 1025. Chalais was rapidly too small
and poor to house all the postulants and had to expand by setting up
daughter abbeys. The first Chalaisian daughter was Almeval, located
somewhere near the mother abbey. The exact location of Almeval is
unknown but its existence is confirmed by letters of Popes Alexander
III and Lucius III.
In 1142, the Bishop of Embrun called the Chalaisians to rule a small
community set up in Boscodon. The new abbey was merged with the priory
of Lavera, located on the other side of the mountain. Aubevaux was
founded near Chalais in 1144. The charte de charité de l'ordre de
Chalais, the rule of the order, was released in 1148. The order ruled
then 10 abbeys and three priories, most of them being located in the
valley of the river Durance, which was a main way of communication
between the mountain regions of Briançonnais, Queyras, Oisans and Ubaye and the delta of the river Rhône. All the abbeys and priories were establihed along the sheep transhumance trails and near water
resources.
The main organizer of the Chalaisian order was Guigues de Revel, who
built the abbeys of Boscodon, Lure and Prads. In 1184, Revel was
appointed Bishop of Digne, where he built the cathedral; in 1186, he
was appointed Abbot-General of Chalais, where he died nearly
hundred-year old.
However, the Chalaisian order remained poor and its foundations were
very isolated from each other. At the end of the 13th century and in
the beginning of the 14th century, all the abbeys and priories but
Boscodon were suppressed and the order eventually disappeared.
In the 16th century, the Bishop of Grasse was also commendatory abbot of the wealthy abbey of Lérins, located on a small island off Cannes. The bishop appointed Don Taxil, worker-monk and prior of Lérins, to create a village near the ancient abbey of Valbonne and attract colonists there. Taxil decided to attract investors, who would build the village and rent the houses and land to colonists coming from the poor hinterland. Don Taxil drafted himself the plans of the village, which are thoroughly described in the acte d'habitation dated 13 October 1519. The village is organized around a central square, to which arcades were added in the 17th century. It has five streets oriented north-south, crossing ten streets oriented west-east. The width of the streets is two canes, c. four meters. A gate opens in the middle of each side of the rectangle. The houses were also built along Taxil's rules. The village progressively increased around the old center but the ancient chequered plan has been kept until now. Three of the original gates (north, south and west) have been preserved, too.
In the 1970s, it was decided to set up a technology park on the plateau
of Valbonne. The plateau was one of the few remaining available places
to set up such a park in the French Riviera. The park was named Sophia
Antipolis, since it was located near the city of Antibes, the ancient
Greek colony of Antipolis. The early years of Sophia Antipolis were
difficult because of the world oil crisis. The first investors
interested in the park were unfortunately oil and mining companies. In
the 1980s, the university of Nice decided to move parts of its crowdy
campus to Sophia Antipolis, where research, education, development and
industry joined their forces together. There are now more than 1,000
companies established in Sophia Antipolis, hiring more than 25,000.
Sophia Antipolis has today an area of 2,500 ha, on the municipalities
of Antibes, Biot, Mougins, Vallauris and Valbonne. It should increase
in area since the municipalities of la Colle-sur-Loup, Opio,
Roquefort-les-Pins and Villeneuve-Loubet have joined the consortium. It
must be noted that preservation of the environment was included in the
project as soon as it began, which has made of Sophia Antipolis an
extremely attractive place of work, and has indirectly preserved the
area from real-estate speculation, the cause of irreversible landscape
and ecosystem destruction in the French Riviera.
A few peripherical municipalities should also benefit from Sophia
Antipolis. The municipalities of le Bar-sur-Loup, Caussols,
Châteauneuf, Courmes, Gourdon, le Rouret, Saint-Paul-de-Vence and
Tourrettes-sur-Loup have joined the municipalities mentioned above to
form the Communauté d'Agglomération de Sophia Antipolis, presided by
the Mayor of Antibes.
Sources:
Ivan Sache, 28 July 2004
The flag of Valbonne is hoisted in front of the city hall, along with the flags of France, European Union and the Region Provence-Alpes-Côte-d'Azur. It is a banner of the municipal arms of Valbonne, whose blazon is:
Azure, a feather or.
The municipal website gives the following blazon:
D'azur à la plume d'oie d'or posée en pal (Azure a goose feather or per pale),
and says that the charge represents the feather used by the monks to draft the plans of the new village in the XVIth century. Note that they say "per pale" whereas the flag shows the feather per bend sinister. The website of the Association des Amis de l'Abbaye shows a coat of arms with a yellow "feather" placed per bend sinister, but mentions that, on St. Blaise's Day, the village of Valbonne is decorated with mimosa branches and blue irises to recall the coat of arms. On the coats of arms shown on that website, the feather looks indeed rather like a mimosa branch. Anyway, the mimosa cannot be the original charge of the coat of arms since this tree is of recent introduction in France. In his Armorial des Communes de Provence, Bresc [bjs94] blazons the coat of arms of Valbonne as:D'azur à une palme d'or (Azure, a palm or),
and shows the palm per bend sinister.
I believe that calling the charge a palm rather than a feather makes
sense, in relation to the abbey of Lérins. The abbey was founded on a
small island by St. Honorat. The island was infested by snakes and
vermin of that ilk. Upon Honorat's request, God flooded the island and
Honorat had to climb on a palm tree to avoid drowning. Another
tradition says he used a palm to clean up the infamous remains of the
vermin once the water went back. Both tradition are of course a
symbolic expression of the victory of christianism over paganism and
devil's beasts. The palm appears on the municipal coat of arms of
Cannes, once also a possession of the abbey of Lérins.
D'azur à la palme d'or posée en pal (Azure, a palm or per pale).
Timms gives:
Azure a branch of palm bend sinister or.
It is therefore impossible to describe accurately the historical coat of arms of Valbonne since all sources are contradictory. Therefore, we don't know for sure if the flag of Valbonne is a banner of the municipal arms rather than a banner of erroneous municipal arms.
Ivan Sache, 28 July 2004