Last modified: 2012-04-09 by ivan sache
Keywords: bouches-du-rhone | cassis | fishes: 2 (grey) | crozier (yellow) | port-miou | cross (blue) | letters: cnpm (red) | letters: yccc (blue) |
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Flag of Cassis
Left, flag adopted in 2004-2005 - Image by Olivier Touzeau, 11 September 2006
Right, flag used before 2004-2005 - Image by Pascal Vagnat, 28 August 2002
See also:
The municipality of Cassis (8,070 inhabitants - Cassidains; 2,686
ha, 80% of them being in protected natural areas) is located on the
Mediterranean Sea, 20 km east of Marseilles. Cassis is located in a bay flanked by the white cliffs of the calanque of Port-Miou in the west
and the golden cliffs of Cap Canaille in the east, and therefore
protected from the strong local wind known as mistral.
The massif of calanques spreads from Marseilles to Cassis. The
calanques are rocky inlets which deeply gash high limestone cliffs.
There is of course an old but friendly rivalry between the two cities
for claiming the name and reputation of the calanques. The calanques of
Port-Miou, Port-Pin and En Vau are on the municipal territory of
Cassis. The massif of calanques is one of the most scenic landscape of
the French Mediterranean coast, with no equivalent elsewhere but on the
Dalmatian coast of Croatia. The characteristic vegetation of the
calanques is made of a few trees (Alep pines and ilex) and halophile
(salt tolerant) and thermophile (heat tolerant) shrubs (myrtles,
junipers, spurges, clematis...). The fauna is sparse, with a few
endangered species such as the Bonelli eagle. In the past, human
activities severely damaged the massif: most ilex were cut as timber
wood and for use in the quarries. However, the massif has been
preserved from urbanization until now. It is a paradise for hicking,
climbing, sailing, fishing and scuba diving.
Since 1996, access to the massif is prohibited by law as soon as wind
speed reaches 40 km/h, during drought periods and from 1 July to the
second Saturday of September (since there are very few trees and no
water sources in the massif, going there in summertime is particularly
clueless). A pleasant way to visit the calanques in summertime is to
make a boat tour from Marseilles, Cassis or La Ciotat. Several
calanques can be reached only from the sea.
The cliffs of Cap Canaille are among the highest maritime cliffs in
Europe (416 m). The name of Canaille might come from Latin Canalis
mons, aquiferous mountain, or from Provencal Cap naïo, swimming
mountain. Whereas the cliffs of the calanques are made of white
limestone, those of Cap Canaille are made of yellow sandstone rich in
sea fossils; these cliffs are famous for their reddish colours at
sundown. A 15 km-long road (Route des Crêtes) links Cassis to La Ciotat
through Cap Canaille.
The hills dominating the port of Cassis were settled in 500-600 BC by
the Ligurians: remains of a fortified site were found on the upper part
of Baou Redon. There was probably a Greek colony in Cassis, linked to
the bigger neighbouring colony of Massilia (Marseilles). In the Roman
period, the port of Cassis was mentioned as Carsicis Portus on the map
known as Antonin's Itinerary. Cassis then lived from fishing, coral and
maritime trade with Northern Africa and the Middle-East.
In the 5th-10th centuries, the inhabitants of Cassis abandoned the unsafe
port threatened by pirates and moved uphill to the castrum (Castrum
Cassitis), a fortified town incorporated to the powerful domain of Les
Baux in 1223. In the 15th century, Cassis was transfered into the
County of Provence; Count René ceded the town to the Bishop of
Marseilles, who owned it until the French Revolution. The castle was
trashed by Charles V of Spain in 1524 and progressively abandoned by
the population, which resettled the sea shore and the port.
In 1791, the fishers of Cassis revolted against the "despotic,
tyrannic, expensive, suspicious and abusive" rule by the prud'hommes
(industrial tribunal) of Marseilles and were allowed to set up their
own tribunal.
In the 18th century, the town of Cassis increased out of its city
walls. After the Restauration, new industries developed in Cassis, such
as cod drying, olive oil production and coral art. Extraction of the
famous stone of Cassis, known since the XVIth century, became
industrial. The white stone of Cassis, dating back to the Urgonian
period (117 millions years BP) and rich in marine fossils, was used to
build the quays of several Mediterranean ports, such as Alexandria,
Algiers, Piraeus, Marseilles and Port-Said; the socle of the Statue of
Liberty was also made of stone of Cassis, as well as the gates of the
Campo Santo in Genoa.
These industries disappeared in the 20th century and were replaced by
wine growing. In 1936, Cassis was one of the three first wine-producing
areas (178 ha, 14 producers) in France to be granted an appellation
d'origine contrôlée (label guaranteeing the origin of the wine). The
town lives now mostly from tourism since most of the old houses have
been preserved and restored, especially near the fishing port.
Cassis is the birth town of the erudite Abbot Barthélémy (1716-1795). The abbot was a famous numismatist, curator of Louis XVI's medals collection for more than 30 years. Barthélémy is mostly known for his studies of the ancient languages, especially Greek and Phenician, and as a precursor of egyptology. His book Voyage du Jeune Anacharsis en Grèce (Travel of young Anacharsis in Greece) was a best-seller which contributed to the re-discovery of the civilization of ancient Greece. In the first pages of La gloire de mon père, Marcel Pagnol mentions that a street in his birth town of Aubagne, not far from Cassis, was called Rue du jeune Anacharsis as a tribute to Barthélémy, but was unanimuously called Rue du jeune anarchiste (Young anarchist's street) by the local people.
Provence was also re-discovered by artists in the end of the 19th
century, and Cassis became a popular vacation place for writers such as
Alphonse Daudet, André Gide, Roger Martin du Gard and Paul Valéry.
Foreigners also stayed there, such as Virginia Woolf, Henry Miller and
Winston Churchill, who did paintings of Cassis.
Cassis became world-famous after the release of the epic poem
Calendal, written by Frédéric Mistral in 1867. Mistral was taken to
Cassis by his friend Frédéric Legré in 1861; the two friends walked on
the shepherd's path leading to mount Gibal, which inspired Mistral.
The poem is made of 12 cantos relating the adventures of Calendal, a
poor anchovy fisher from Cassis, "humble among the humbles and proud
among the prouds". In order to conquer the princess and fairy
Estérelle, descendant of the family of Les Baux, Calendal has to resist
to the greatest hardships. The poem is an evocation of the life in
Provence short before the French Revolution and mostly a tribute to
Provence. Mistral also "invented" the famous motto of Cassis:
Qu'a vist Paris, se noun a vist Cassis, pou dire: n'ai rîn vist (Who
says he has seen Paris but not Cassis should say he had seen nothing).
In the 1930s, the sculptor Cornu erected a statue of Calendal on the
promenade of Cassis. The statue was destroyed during a bombing in 1944;
in 1999, Bouvier made a brand new statue of Calendal, of course with
the stone of Cassis. The fisher is shown glancing to mount Gibal, where
Estérelle settled after having left her bad husband Count Séveran.
The fame of Cassis even increased in the 20th century. Several films
were made in the port, for instance Naïs, by Marcel Pagnol. After the
painters of the Provencal school (Ponson, Monticelli, Ziem and
Seyssaud), modern painters such as Braque, Derain, Picabia, Verdilhan,
Signac and Dufy, stayed in Cassis.
Source: Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 14 September 2005
The flag of Cassis is white with a yellow vertical stripe placed
along the hoist and a thinner blue horizontal stripe placed along the
lower border of the flag, not stretching all over the flag length. A
blue and white version of the coat of arms is placed near the yellow
stripe; on the right of the coat of arms is written ville de (blue) /
CASSIS (yellow).
The description of the new logotype of the town can be found in
the municipal gazette dated December 2004. Mayor Jean-Pierre Teisseire explains there that the new logotype
symbolizes the identity of the municipality and links tradition and
modernity. Blue recalls the sky and the sea, yellow recalls the cliffs
of Cap Canaille and the vineyard at sundown in autumn.
Since the new flag is indeed the new logotype, it is probable it also
appeared near December 2004.
Beforehand, the flag of Cassis was white with the municipal coat of arms in the
middle. VILLE DE CASSIS (Town of Cassis) is written in black letters
below the shield.
The municipal coat of arms of Cassis is (GASO):
D'azur à la crosse d'or accostée de deux poissons affrontés d'argent
posés en pal, or (municipal website):
D'azur à la crosse d'or posée en pal à côté [accostée] de deux poissons d'argent aussi en pal.
Bresc [bjs94] gives a third variant of the blason:
D'azur, à une crosse d'or, accostée de deux poissons, d'argent,
affrontés et posés en pal.
These arms were registered in the Armorial Général (Arm.I, 443; bl. I, 1089; registration fee 20 livres).
Quoting Achard (Géographie de Provence), Bresc adds that Cassis was
part of the Barony of Aubagne, whose lord was the Bishop of Marseilles.
According to an Edict of 25 May 1577 and Letters Patented of 6 May 1578
and 2 June 1579, registered by the Parliament on 3 July 1579, the
Bishop of Marseilles was not allowed to alienate (dispose of property)
the domain of Cassis, which was something very uncommon in the Ancient
Regime.
The crozier can be seen on the seals appended on several documents kept
in the municipal archives. The oldest of these documents dates back to
1471, the year Count René of Provence ceded the town of Cassis to the
Bishop of Marseilles. A bishop must hold his crozier with the curl on
his left, that is on the viewer's right. The image of the coat of arms
of Cassis in Bresc's Armorial has an erroneous "mirrored" crozier.
A crozier with the curl on the viewer's left represents an abbot; it
can be seen for instance on the municipal arms of La Ciotat, a town
neighbouring of Cassis but belonging to the St. Victor's Abbot in
Marseilles, once the great rival of the Bishop for the control of
Marseilles.
The fishes appeared in the beginning of the 17th century. They were
granted by Bishop Frédéric Ragueneau on St. Peter's Day in 1603, upon
request of the fishers' guild.
Dominique Cureau, Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 17 September 2005
Cercle Nautique de Cassis
The Cercle Nautique de Cassis (CNC, website) was founded on 23 March 1929. In 2010, the CNC resumed the water jousting tradition in Cassis: the "Francs Jouteurs Cassidains" squad, inactive since 1981 and eventually dissolved in 1995, was refounded and incorporated to the CNC.
The flag of CNC, seen on photos available on the club's website, is
white with the CNC emblem in the middle.
The emblem of CNC is made of a yellow steering wheel, inscribed with
the name of the club in blue Capital letters. In the center of the
wheel is placed a blue disk charged with elements from the municipal
arms of Cassis, the bishop's cross, ending here with an anchor,
surrounded by two fishes.
Ivan Sache, 6 November 2011
Club Nautique de Port-Miou
Burgee of CNPM - Image by Ivan Sache, 17 March 2003
The calanque of Port-Miou (Portus Majus in the Roman times) has always
been used as a natural harbour, since it is completely protected from
wind and has a source of fresh water. On 5 October 1376, the fleet
which brought back the Pope from Avignon to Rome took shelter from the
storm in the calanque of Port-Miou, where the chapel Notre-Dame de
Bon-Secours (Our-Lady of Good-Assistance) was built to commemorate the
event.
In the 20th century, the company Solvay was allowed to extract
limestone from the cliffs of Port-Miou; the stone was directly loaded
on boats moored in the calanque by big hoppers and shipped to the soda
factory in Salins-de-Giraud, in Camargue. Some 6-7 millions tons of
rocks were extracted until 1982, when extraction stopped and the
natural site was reclaimed. Port-Miou is now a crowded harbour with 460
mooring spaces.
Club Nautique de Port-Miou (CNPM, website), although located in Cassis, has a burgee clearly influenced by the traditional flag of Marseilles, white with a blue cross and the letters C, N, P, M in red placed in the four quarters, respectively.
Ivan Sache, 14 September 2005
The calanques are administratively part of the municipality
of Marseilles. The border between the two municipal areas is
precisely at the Port Miou calanque, the last one when you
sail from Marseilles to Cassis.
The influence of Marseilles on the CNPM burgee is normal, most
people owning boats in the small harbour of Cassis live or at least
work in Marseilles and consider themselves as Marseillais.
Philippe Bondurand, 17 May 2001
Yacht Club des Calanques de Cassis
Burgee of YCCC - Image by Ivan Sache, 22 May 2006
YCCC (website) was founded in 1968, with 20 members. Today's membership is 216.
The four yacht clubs located in Port-Miou (CNPM, YCCC, UPPM and Ski Club Phocéen) have founded Union Nautique to manage the
port of Port-Miou, in agreement with the municipality of Cassis.
The burgee of YCCC is horizontally divided turquoise
blue-white-turquoise blue (1:2:1) with the turquoise blue letters YCCC
in the white stripe.
Ivan Sache, 22 May 2006