Chapter

Revolutionary Centralization & Regional Resistance

The French Revolution attacked the cultural infrastructure of regional identity: the Republican calendar replaced saints' days, religious processions were suppressed, and the decree that 'federalism and superstition speak Basque and Breton' targeted regional languages for eradication. The Jules Ferry laws of the 1880s banned Occitan, Gascon, and Basque from schools, enforcing French as the sole language of the Republic. Yet the Gascon calendar survived underground: the feux de la Saint-Jean (June 23–24) continued as bonfire celebrations that, as the Escòla Gaston Febus documents, have now 'lost their religious character' and reconnected with their 'pagan solstice tradition.' The mayade (May 1 tree-planting) persisted in the Landes as a living medieval tradition. The course landaise was formally regulated in the 19th century—moved from streets to arenas like the arènes du Plumaçon in Mont-de-Marsan (built 1889)—and its modern form crystallized around 1830, preserving the bloodless Gascon alternative to Spanish corridas. Bordeaux thrived as the engine of the Atlantic wine trade, and Angoulême's paper-making industry (capitalizing on the Charente River's water power) made it the center of France's publishing trade. The Félibrige movement (founded 1854) had a Gascon branch, the Escòla Gaston Febus, that specifically defended Gascon as distinct from Provençal—reflecting the Basque substrate that makes Gascon phonologically unique among Occitan varieties.

1789 - 1914
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Places connected to this chapter

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knowledge

Angoulême

France's paper-making capital from the Industrial era (capitalizing on the Charente River's water power), which made it the center of the publishing trade and, since 1974, the world capital of bande dessinée through its International Comics Festival (FIBD). The Festival (created 1973, first edition 1974) is the world's largest comics event. The city's Renaissance ramparts and hilltop position make its layered heritage visible—medieval fortifications, industrial-era paper mills, and contemporary festival culture. Anchor modes: custodian; signal; living_ritual; material_layer | Search hooks: Angoulême; FIBD; bande dessinée; International Comics Festival; paper-making; Renaissance ramparts

Attend the International Comics Festival (January); walk the Renaissance ramparts with panoramic views; visit the Cité Internationale de la Bande Dessinée et de l'Image; explore the paper-making heritage; see the Musée d'Angoulême

trade

Bordeaux

Roman Burdigala, then the engine of the Atlantic wine trade for eight centuries, Bordeaux layers Gallo-Roman port ruins beneath 18th-century commercial architecture (Place de la Bourse) and modern wine tourism infrastructure. By the early 14th century, 80,000 tuns of wine were exported annually. The Garonne river route connected the city to North Sea and later global markets. Gascon toponymy in surrounding place names reveals the Aquitanian substrate beneath the Roman and medieval trade city. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer; network_route; signal | Search hooks: Bordeaux; Burdigala; wine trade; Garonne port; Roman ruins; Place de la Bourse; claret export

See Roman ruins beneath the city; walk the Place de la Bourse and Miroir d'Eau; tour wine merchant chais along the Garonne; visit the Musée d'Aquitaine for Gallo-Roman and trade history

continuity vault

Mont-de-Marsan

The capital of Gascon cultural resistance and the course landaise tradition. The arènes du Plumaçon (1889, Heritage of the 20th Century label 2007, 7,100 seats) is the venue for the Fêtes de la Madeleine each July, where course landaise (Gascon, no bloodshed—écarteurs dodge, sauteurs leap over charging cows) shares the program with Spanish-style corridas—a Pyrenean cultural blend that distinguishes indigenous Gascon from imported Spanish elements. The course landaise was repeatedly banned as 'regional resistance' but the Gascons 'ignored the administrative rulings and persisted.' The mayade (May 1 tree-planting) and feux de la Saint-Jean (June 23–24) are living Landes traditions that preserve the Gascon seasonal calendar. Anchor modes: custodian; signal; living_ritual; material_layer | Search hooks: Mont-de-Marsan; Fêtes de la Madeleine; course landaise; arènes du Plumaçon; écarteur; coursaüre; Gascon tradition

Watch course landaise events at the arènes du Plumaçon (season runs roughly April–October); attend the Fêtes de la Madeleine in July; see Gascon song concerts (Cantère); visit the Musée Despiau-Wlérick; experience mayade on May 1 in surrounding villages

Celebrations and traditions

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Chapter

Reformation, Witch Trials & Bourbon Centralization

1500 - 1789

The Reformation split the region along religious lines: La Rochelle became a Huguenot stronghold whose Protestant temple (active from the 1530s) and massive harbor towers were built for religious-war defense. The 1627–28 siege by Louis XIII's forces starved the city into submission, ending Protestant political power—walk the Vieux Port and the towers (Saint-Nicolas, La Chaîne, Lanterne) still bear witness to this trauma. In the Pyrenean corner, Pierre de Lancre's witch-hunt in Labourd (1609) persecuted accused sorginak (Basque 'witches') and documented akelarre gatherings—his lurid records, extracted under torture, distorted actual Basque folk practice but preserved place names that map pre-Christian sacred geography onto the landscape. The same decade saw Béarn's sovereignty end: Louis XIII formally annexed the viscounty in 1620, imposing French administration over what had been an independent principality with its own legal code (Fors de Béarn) and language. Meanwhile, the Charente valley's wine trade transformed into brandy distillation—Dutch merchants introduced the technique in the 15th century, and by the 18th century, houses like Martell (1715) and Hennessy (1765) shipped cognac worldwide. The course landaise was repeatedly banned by the central government as evidence of 'regional resistance to integration into the French State,' but the Gascons 'ignored the administrative rulings and persisted.'

Chapter

World Wars, Memory Conflicts & Cultural Revival

From 1914

The 20th century brought trauma and revival in equal measure. On June 10, 1944, the 2nd SS Panzer Division destroyed Oradour-sur-Glane, killing 642 civilians; the preserved ruins stand today as a lieu de mémoire where local and national memory diverge profoundly—the families' association (ANFM) privatized the cemetery and ossuary, refusing state presence at commemorations after the 1953 amnesty for malgré-nous conscripts was experienced as a betrayal. The Centre de la Mémoire (opened 1999) tells the national narrative; the ruins speak the families' grief. Cultural revival took other forms: the Fêtes de Bayonne, founded in 1932 by Aviron Bayonnais rugby players inspired by Pamplona's Sanfermines, grew into France's largest regional festival—deliberately called 'Fêtes' rather than 'feria' to assert its Basque-Gascon character against Spanish taurine framing. The 'journée basque' program draws on pelote, force basque, and passe-rues maintained by ~51,000 Basque speakers in Iparralde. At Mont-de-Marsan, the Fêtes de la Madeleine each July blends course landaise (Gascon, no bloodshed) with Spanish-style corridas in the 7,100-seat arènes du Plumaçon. La Rochelle's Francofolies (founded 1985) promotes Francophone music in a city whose Protestant heritage it does not reference—illustrating how contemporary cultural identity can layer over historical trauma without erasing it. Angoulême's International Comics Festival (since 1974) transformed a paper-making city into the world capital of bande dessinée. The Molac Law (2021) provided limited constitutional protection for regional languages, and calandreta immersion schools teach Occitan to new generations—revival rather than unbroken continuity, but proof that Gascon and Basque festival vocabulary are being actively reinserted into living practice. Today, stand in a Saint-Jean bonfire circle on June 23, watch an écarteur dodge a charging coursaüre at Mont-de-Marsan, or walk the Fêtes de Bayonne in red and white—and feel the calendar and the cultural resistance that have kept these practices alive across centuries of state suppression.

Chapter

Feudal Duchy & Plantagenet-Valois Conflict

1000 - 1500

The Duchy of Aquitaine became Europe's richest dynastic prize when Eleanor inherited it in 1137 and married first the King of France, then the King of England—bringing the entire southwest under Plantagenet rule. For three centuries, English and French kings fought over these territories in the Hundred Years' War, ending at the Battle of Castillon (1453), where French cannon fire extinguished English continental ambitions. Meanwhile, the Viscounty of Béarn declared itself sovereign under Gaston Fébus in 1347—'from God and from no man'—with Pau as its capital and the Béarnais dialect of Occitan as its official language (a sovereignty that lasted until 1620). In Limoges, workshops produced champlevé enamel reliquaries exported across Christendom: some 7,500 surviving pieces, the largest body of medieval enamelwork. The Abbey of Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe, its nave covered in 11th–12th-century biblical murals André Malraux called the 'Romanesque Sistine Chapel,' earned UNESCO recognition for the greatest single campaign of Romanesque wall painting in Europe. The course landaise—Gascony's bloodless cow-running tradition—was first documented in 1457 at Saint-Sever 'during the Celebration of Saint John,' tying it to the solstice calendar node that still structures summer festivals today.

Chapter

Frankish Aquitaine & Carolingian Christianization

600 - 1000

Frankish expansion into Aquitaine after the Battle of Tours/Poitiers (732), where Charles Martel halted the Umayyad advance, began integrating this southwestern corner into the Carolingian Christian order. Poitiers became a spiritual and military frontier—its Baptistère Saint-Jean ranks among the oldest Christian structures in France. Monastic foundations spread across the region: the Abbey of Saint-Martial in Limoges (founded 848) became a major cultural center whose scriptorium produced illuminated manuscripts now counted among the masterpieces of Romanesque art. Carolingian administration imposed Frankish structures over the older Aquitanian and Basque cultural geography, but the duchy of Aquitaine maintained considerable autonomy under its own dukes—a pattern of regional resistance that would recur across every subsequent era.