Agde

Coordinates: 43°18′39″N 3°28′33″E / 43.3108°N 3.4758°E / 43.3108; 3.4758
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Agde
The cathedral
The cathedral
Coat of arms of Agde
Location of Agde
Map
Agde is located in France
Agde
Agde
Agde is located in Occitanie
Agde
Agde
Coordinates: 43°18′39″N 3°28′33″E / 43.3108°N 3.4758°E / 43.3108; 3.4758
CountryFrance
RegionOccitania
DepartmentHérault
ArrondissementBéziers
CantonAgde
IntercommunalityCA Hérault Méditerranée
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2026) Gilles d'Ettore[1]
Area
1
50.81 km2 (19.62 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[2]
29,103
 • Density570/km2 (1,500/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Agathois.e (French)
dagdenc.a, agatenc.a (Occitan)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
34003 /34300
Elevation0–110 m (0–361 ft)
(avg. 5 m or 16 ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Agde (French pronunciation: [aɡd(ə)]; Occitan: [ˈadde, ˈate]) is a commune in the Hérault department in Southern France. It is the Mediterranean port of the Canal du Midi.

Location

Map

Agde is located on the Hérault river, 4 kilometres (2 miles) from the Mediterranean Sea, and 750 kilometres (466 miles) from Paris. The Canal du Midi connects to the Hérault river at the Agde Round Lock ("L'Écluse Ronde d'Agde") just north of Agde, and the Hérault flows into the Mediterranean at Le Grau d'Agde [fr]. Agde station has high speed rail connections to Paris Lille Genova, Perpignan plus Spain, and regional services to Narbonne, Montpellier and Avignon.

History

Fountain of the Republic in town centre
Amphitrite in the place de la Marine at the river, by Léon François Chervet[3]
Joust
shield

Foundation

Agde (525 BCE) is one of the oldest towns in France, after Béziers (575 BCE) and Marseille (600 BCE).[4] Agde (

Eros, which had possibly been on their way to a villa in Gallia Narbonensis
when they were lost in a shipwreck.

Development

The

Hérault river, Grau d'Agde, became from the Antique to the Eighteenth century period the most important port in this occitanian region of the Mediterranée for trade.[7]

Harbour, a strategic point in the Mediterranean area. The work, made difficult by the gradual silting up of the coastline, was abandoned after the death of the Cardinal. Fort Richelieu remains in place.[7]

At the end of the eighteenth century, when tall ships gave way to motor merchant ships, Agde changed its activity towards the exploitation of the land, market gardening, olives and fruits. The local viticulture then experienced one of its greatest moments of prosperity until the phylloxera.[7][8]

Actual shore developpment began in the 60's following first waterfront in Grau d'Agde.[9] The main marina (Port) was designed next to the location of the cape small fishing port (Cap d'Agde). The fishing port of the Hérault river has been modernised with its professional fish market hall[10]. The river's shipyards, which are mixed with pleasure boats and small fishing boats, succeeded the wooden boat yards. "1960 : The president's plan is actualy to make from the coast of Occitania the "French Florida".[11]

The heads of the inter-ministerial mission developped collective facilities to attract the greatest number of tourists: holiday centres and camps of the nationalised PTT, EDF, SNCF; holiday villages houses with belgian, netherland, german investments. Campsites are created, one with the first naturist settement in France. About leisure, tennis courts, discotheques, amusement parks (an aquatic park) are built. The National Forestry Office with arboriculturists (e.g. Vilmorin) contributed to the creation of green spaces in the resort, and reforestation. Hundreds of thousands of seedlings are then distributed free of charge to individuals.[12]

Since 2007 the Sodéal (Economic development society of Agde and the coast (70% of capital owned by the town) ammenages the marinas on the Hérault river and the shore, main one Le Port de Cap d'Agde.[13]

After the installation of basic urban networks, going further, in the same time of cycling infrastructure reamenaged because of car traffic jams in the 2010s, plus municipal car parks receive solar panels in 2017 2019.[14][15]

2021-2024 Project for extended railway station and the marina on the Canal du Midi started with destroying the retail buildings around Hôtel Riquet, the Agde offices of the canal's founder.

The access with the tunnel under the railway opened 2023.[16]

Historical act in Agde : French Clergy and property

In the history of

Roman Catholicism in France, the Council of Agde was held 10 September 506 at Agde, in Saint-André church, under the presidency of Caesarius of Arles. It was attended by thirty-five bishops, and its forty-seven genuine canons dealt "with ecclesiastical discipline". One of its canons (the seventh), forbidding ecclesiastics to sell or alienate the property of the church from which they derived their living, seems to be the earliest mention of the later system of benefices.[17][18]

Population

Agde's inhabitants are called Agathois.

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1793 6,744—    
1800 6,744+0.00%
1806 7,639+2.10%
1821 7,726+0.08%
1831 8,202+0.60%
1836 8,230+0.07%
1841 8,251+0.05%
1846 8,884+1.49%
1851 9,115+0.51%
1856 9,439+0.70%
1861 9,747+0.64%
1866 9,586−0.33%
1872 8,829−1.36%
1876 8,251−1.68%
1881 8,170−0.20%
1886 8,446+0.67%
1891 7,389−2.64%
1896 8,478+2.79%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1901 9,533+2.37%
1906 8,435−2.42%
1911 9,265+1.89%
1921 8,325−1.06%
1926 9,360+2.37%
1931 9,605+0.52%
1936 9,242−0.77%
1946 7,592−1.95%
1954 7,897+0.49%
1962 8,751+1.29%
1968 10,184+2.56%
1975 11,605+1.88%
1982 13,107+1.75%
1990 17,583+3.74%
1999 19,988+1.43%
2007 21,104+0.68%
2012 24,651+3.16%
2017 28,609+3.02%
Source: EHESS[19] and INSEE (1968-2017)[20]

10% permanent residents, the population goes up to 200,000 inhabitants in the summer (fourth of a year)[21]

Wine, wineyards and winemakers

Electric wine pump "Catalane" Agde Model, 1891-92, [22].
Belle Epoque
"
Wineyards in La Roquille, foreground Mont St Loup

The vineyards in Agde are among the

viticulture in the 19th century with diseases. However, while Aramon was able to save the production situation (see the electric pump) in the region by cultivation near the sea,[24] the intensive production of wine in the colony of Algeria caused both the low profitability and the low quality of Agde wines among Languedoc zone. Production began to decline. And production has plummeted since the station was planned, as housing needs space. The Richemer Cellars were born from the merger of the cooperative cellars of Agde [1936] and Marseillan.[25] However, tourist festivals are still present in the 21st century[26] tourist wine sales too.[27] And if the last vineyard of Bagnas is now very small below Château Maraval[28] and the Meyer distillery in ruins walking in is a leisure, its wine is better for "connoisseurs".[29][30] and "Wine tourism" has been in full development for several years.[23]

Retail parks suburb belt

Marinas

Lifeguard boats, quay of Harbourmaster office
Lift for boats on the dry dock Avant-Port

The Port of Cap d'Agde (main marina) was excavated following the Racine mission. It has a single entrance, due to the south-north marine currents that silt it up. It is made up of two distinct parts, built around accessible and non-accessible islands. The part between accessible Ile des Loisirs and non-accessible Ile St Martin is the part of the harbor where the boat's mooring ring to the quay is private and sold with the villa or apartment. The part between Ile St Martin and accessible Ile des Pêcheurs is the part of the harbor where the boat's mooring ring is rented to the harbor master.[33] Plus Port Ambonne (Port Lano naturist camp facility), Berges de l'Hérault (historic Herault riverbanks).[34]

  • Fort de Brescou and lighthouse at the end of the pier
    Fort de Brescou and lighthouse at the end of the pier
  • Houses on Ile St-Martin below buildings on Mont St-Martin and the green Mont St-Loup on the right
    Houses on Ile St-Martin below buildings on Mont St-Martin and the green Mont St-Loup on the right
  • Main landmark in the marina : the campanile of the former Cap center 1970
    Main landmark in the marina : the campanile of the former Cap center 1970
  • Harbormaster office (Avant-Port)
    Harbormaster office (Avant-Port)
  • Nautical center ending Richelieu beach side
    Nautical center ending Richelieu beach side

Architecture

Genouillade chapel
Saint-Joseph Bridge over the Canal du Midi
Town centre, pedestrian area
Château Laurens and the river Hérault
Battlements
Maréchaux Bridge and the Hérault River
Bishops's mill

Agde is known for the distinctive black basalt used in local buildings such as the cathedral of Saint Stephen, built in the 12th century to replace a 9th-century Carolingian edifice built on the foundations of a fifth-century Roman church.

Bishop Guillaume fortified the cathedral's precincts and provided it with a 35-metre

donjon (keep). The Romanesque cloister
of the cathedral was demolished in 1857.

The sanctuary of Notre-Dame-du-Grau was once an ancient temple, for dévotion in the Antique. The Agenouillade (

Kneel) is built after a miraculous prayer by Our Lady (Mary, mother of Jesus) to avoid flooding in Agde in the Sixteenth century.[35]

Near by the Agde Round Lock, aside the rail-way (with a special station for a private stop), Château Laurens is an splendid furnished villa, dandy residence. Inside is a gothic style "salon de concert" with original 19th century stained glass windows from Bézier's school. [36] All like some wine châteaux of Bordeaux were built in classic style due to winer richess, this one comming from an Agde wineyard income is in eclectic style, [37] it is the most beautiful concrete building in Occitania from

Belle Epoque.[38]
But if it includes a electric power plant, it does not include a producer wine cellar.

Cap d'Agde, footbridge from the Flanerie shopping mall to the Port, in the background the old city centre with annexes

The urban planning of the 60s in France for the new towns separates car traffic and pedestrian-cyclist traffic with some footbridges.

The Bishops's Mill is now (2010) a cultural exhibition center, it was " a 13th century building and former flour mill rehabilitated in the last century as a hydraulic factory and then as a "sardine factory".[39]

The cooperative winery is created in 1936, but merged in 1998 with the one of Marseillan, activity in Marseillan, traffic on Beziers-Sète road.[40] It is transformed into offices and apartments in 2021.[41]

Pedestrian lane from La Clape (Museum) to La Roquille (beach), concrete tunnel support for flower trees "charmille Tony Garnier" style

Former National and Municipal Police Station is founded in the old building of National Police in the town-center in 2004, the new one is an extension. And the new establishment replacing the old one in Cap center is open in 2020 (cost 1,2 million€). [42][43]

Ephebe Museum

The Musée de l'Éphebe was inaugurated in 1987 after a series of clandestine archaeological excavations of the Roman villa in front of the arena, culminating in the first official underwater archaeological museum.[44] The new municipal and departmental swimming pool L'Archipel, cité de l'eau, is created in 2011, a wooden structure, glass roof.[45]

New congress centre

The new town centre of Cap d'Agde, design

Hervé di Rosa), a new tourist office, ground floors a shopping area (housing starts from 2020 to 2024).[47][48]
Circular Casino Barrière (architect Philippe Bonon), is the first built with the today redevelopment of the Ile des Loisirs. [49]

The Maison des Savoirs, former Agde high school transfered at Paul Emile Victor school in Cap d'Agde site, is a Médiathèque, it is the transformation of the old school (built in the 19th century), the first phase was designed in 2000 by Denis Milhé, the second phase is that of Philippe Bonon, opened in 2020.[46]

The theatre, associated with the media library of the Maison des Savoirs has been rehabilitated since 2020,[50] the whole renovation of the esplanade starting from the Hérault and ending at the theatre will end in 2024.

  • Agde Round Lock
  • Chateau Laurens glass window with floral pattern in private living room
    Chateau Laurens glass window with floral pattern in private living room
  • Stained glass window of the Tourist Office, represents microscopic structure of carbon
    Stained glass window of the Tourist Office, represents microscopic structure of carbon
  • Watchtower over wineyards, known as the "Tour des Anglais" ("Tower of the Englishes")[51], current establishment of the Army
    Watchtower over wineyards, known as the "Tour des Anglais" ("Tower of the Englishes")[51], current establishment of the Army
  • High school Paul Emile Victor, 2006, reminding Aztec pyramid (P.E. Victor studied them) in the continuation of 70's pyramidal architecture with brutalism
    High school
    brutalism
  • Cap d'Agde Port traboule in the buidings, between boutiques and restaurants
    Cap d'Agde Port traboule in the buidings, between boutiques and restaurants
  • Cap d'Agde iron bridge over road Beziers-Sète
    Cap d'Agde iron bridge over road Beziers-Sète
  • Beach La Roquille, "front de mer" restaurants and sandwicheries, architecture 1970
    Beach La Roquille, "front de mer" restaurants and sandwicheries, architecture 1970

History of the communities in Agde

Spanish community

Gypsy community

Jewish community

It is assumed that a Jewish community was established in the town around the sixth century AD. During the Council of Agde, assembled by the Catholic church in 506 AD, Christian laymen and ecclesiastics were prohibited from eating with Jews or hosting them. This prohibition suggests that the town Jews held good relations with their town neighbours. It is also assumed that the Jewish community was never large, since it did not own a cemetery and buried their dead in Béziers, three miles away.[52]

The

Jewish name of the city was Agdi, or Akdi (אגדי).[53]

Agde camp

Agde was one of the Internment camps in France, 1936-1946, for the "dangerous people". [54]

"In February 1939, Agde had a population of 9,000 when the army decided to build a camp at its gates to accommodate 25,000 Spanish “Retirada” republicans. When war was declared, they were replaced by soldiers from the Czechoslovak army, joined a year later by workers from Indochina. In May-June 1940, the town welcomed a large number of French refugees, as well as Belgians, Poles and Czechoslovakians, (including Jews), many of whom were interned in the camp."[55]

During World War II, about two thousand Jews from Germany and Austria were sent to the camp near the town; most were deported on 24 August 1942.[56]

D-Day Memorial

Sport and leisure

Agde golf course (seen from Mt St Martin, back to the housing estates)
Swimming pool Cité de l'eau, overall shape Japanese helmet design (deliberate, inspired by comic book manga). Foreground bus station. 2017
Bagnas natural reserve since 1984
Bagnas
Boat show for traders since 1999
Salon nautique
Tennis since 1973
1973, le Camp Barthès au Cap-d'Agde
Vinocap
Vinocap
Deuch'
La folie Deuch'
E-mobility
e-mobility

In 1973 "Cap-d'Agde was the temple of the yellow ball in the camp created by Pierre Barthès, before being the Mecca of naturism".[11]

In 1993 the Mediterranean Games began in Cap d'Agde. To celebrate the memory of first 1601 historic tournament in town, in 2001 the city of Agde organised major festivities bringing together all the jousting societies of the region.[57]

Agde joutes, Belle Epoque
Racing Club Agathois, 1929

Agde has a football club

Championnat de France amateur 2
.

Agde also has a rugby club, Rugby Olympique Agathois (ROA), who play in the French Federale 1 competition.

Twin towns - sister cities

Town State/Region Country
Antequera  Andalusia  Spain[59]

See also


References

  1. ^ "Répertoire national des élus: les maires" (in French). data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises. 4 May 2022.
  2. ^ "Populations légales 2021". The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. 28 December 2023.
  3. Exposition of 1937. She was preserved and offered to the city, where she now symbolizes Agde's maritime vocation. Base Palissy: Statue : Amphitrite
    , Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  4. ^ Ludovic Trabuchet. "Des révélations sur le passé grec de Béziers". Midi Libre (in French). Midilibre.fr. Archived from the original on 15 March 2013. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  5. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica, §A11.1
  6. ^ Pseudo Scymnus or Pausanias of Damascus, Circuit of the Earth, § 208
  7. ^ a b c "Une histoire venue de la mer". ville-agde.fr (in French).
  8. ^ "Berges de l'Hérault". port-capdagde.com (in French).
  9. ^ "LE GRAU D'AGDE - Une rétrospective d'hier à aujourd'hui et des photos inédites !". www.herault-tribune.com (in French).
  10. ^ Fish processing hall [fr], fish sold with deceasing price in the European directive manner
  11. ^ a b Garay, Bruno (17 August 2018). "1973, le Camp Barthès au Cap-d'Agde". L'Equipe (in French).
  12. ^ Moreau, Gilles (3 April 2017). "Le Cap d'Agde : une histoire née de la mer et des hommes" (in French).
  13. ^ "Agde coup dur pour les plaisanciers" (in French). 17 January 2023. Delegate of the management of the marinas of Cap d'Agde and the sites on the Hérault river for a period of 20 years, Sodéal will discuss this Wednesday morning, during the first meeting since 2017 of the Local Committee of Permanent Users of the Ports of Cap d'Agde (Clupp), an increase in its tariffs of around 12%.
  14. ^ "LES PARKINGS CATALOGNE ET COQUILLES ÉQUIPÉS D'OMBRIÈRES PHOTOVOLTAÏQUES". ville-agde.fr. 22 November 2017.
  15. ^ free carpark Catalogne-Gallois, beach Môle and campsite
  16. ^ "L'AGGLO Hérault Méditerranée : aménagement du quartier de la méditerranéenne" (in French). 2 April 2021. ECONOMICS The demolition of the buildings located on the 8.5-hectare industrial wasteland in the Mediterranean [is done in 2023]. The GGL-Proméo consortium will be responsible for the development of this space. The creation of this new centre of attractiveness will be a major challenge in the context of the urban project to enhance the heart of the city of Agde and accompanies the other operations carried out in parallel, namely the creation of the river port on the Canal du Midi, the restoration of Château Laurens and the creation of a multimodal interchange hub at the railway station [...] A functional mix of permanent housing, tourist accommodation and a programme of offices, shops and services on 35,000 m² [...] A training centre, the future headquarters of the agglomeration and the centre for conservation and studies in archaeology [...] Requalification of the Hôtel Riquet along the Canal du Midi and the hangar located to the south along the railway tracks, into a vast, multi-functional hall, at the centre of the flows of the district and the train station [...] Flood risk particularly impacting the site: the floating habitat and the suspended city. Floating habitat: the creation of a body of water is planned. The city suspended: all new constructions, excluding the rehabilitation of buildings deemed heritage and preserved, are planned on stilts with the first surfaces developed from the 1st floor [...] A development planned by 2024 [...] The balance sheet of the transaction is balanced at approximately €11.5 million excluding VAT. The selected consortium also undertakes to pay a contribution of €1 million to the local authority for the financing of the railway footbridge that the agglomeration community must build to link the Agde station, the future Multimodal Interchange Hub, to the Mediterranean quarter, so that the district is a real gateway to the territory from the regional and national rail network.
  17. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Council of Agde". www.newadvent.org. Archived from the original on 29 October 2009. Retrieved 8 October 2009.
  18. ^ "Medieval Sourcebook: Council of Agde: Concerning Slaves of the Church, 506". www.fordham.edu. Archived from the original on 31 March 2009. Retrieved 8 October 2009.
  19. ^ Des villages de Cassini aux communes d'aujourd'hui: Commune data sheet Agde, EHESS (in French).
  20. ^ Population en historique depuis 1968, INSEE
  21. ^ Meaning 1 /10 tax-payer may vote in mayor election, deciding the communal budget and urban projects.
  22. ^ "pump and silo for grapes" (in French). The engineer-architect Paul Brès patented this system for his reinforced concrete silo tank, he would have considered this silo to be a kind of "cathedral" because it was visible from afar. Excerpts from the label of the exhibition LA CAVE COOPÉRATIVE D'AGDE, DE SA CRÉATION À NOS JOURS", Office du Tourisme, Agde, 09/2020.
  23. ^ a b "Hérault - Cap d'Agde Méditerranée présent à la « Fête des Vendanges » de Montmartre". occitanie-tribune.com (in French). 2 October 2019.
  24. ^ See Vias by the sea on sand and Lézignan-la-Cèbe with the Minervois AOC on pebbles inland with other grape varieties
  25. ^ "LES CAVES RICHEMER – CAVEAU D'AGDE" (in French). The Richemer Cellars were born from the merger of the cooperative cellars of Agde and Marseillan. They bring together 350 winegrowers on a vineyard of 1500ha and an annual production of 100,000hl with 65% white wines, 25% rosés and 10% red wines. They owe their name to a legend: Henri de Richet, a winegrower from Marseillan who is said to have made his fortune in the wine trade, thanks to maritime trade. He was soon nicknamed "Henri de Richemer". They bring together 350 winegrowers on a vineyard of 1500ha and an annual production of 100,000hl with 65% white wines, 25% rosés and 10% red wines. They owe their name to a legend: Henri de Richet, a winegrower from Marseillan who is said to have made his fortune in the wine trade, thanks to maritime trade. He was soon nicknamed "Henri de Richemer.
  26. ^ Fauli, Arnaud (23 October 2023). "Fête des vendanges à Agde : engouement populaire et tradition au rendez-vous". Midi Libre (in French).
  27. ^ https://levindemerde.com/ levindemerde.com [shitwine.com]
  28. ^ "RANDONNEE LE DOMAINE DE MARAVAL". herault-tourisme.com (in French).
  29. ^ "Hérault : Quels sont les 8 vins du département médaillés au Mondial des Vins Blancs de Strasbourg ?". herault-tribune.com (in French). 10 April 2024. Hérault dept.: What are the 8 wines from the department that have won medals at the Mondial des Vins Blancs in Strasbourg? The Richemer cellars, located in Marseillan in the Hérault, were particularly rewarded, with two gold medals for their IGP Pays d'Oc Richemer Viognier 2023 and the Souvenir Cap d'Agde IGP Côte de Thau 2023.
  30. ^ MATHIEU, Danielle (18 October 2017). "AGDE BELLE EPOQUE à la FETE DES VENDANGES DE MONTMARTRE [Paris]". herault-tribune.com (in French). Présidente d'AGDE BELLE EPOQUE
  31. ^ "La criée" (in French).
  32. ^
  33. ^ "CAP D'AGDE MAIN PORT PRESENTATION". port-capdagde.com (in French). Ideal base for Mediterranean cruises to Spain (50 miles), the Balearics (200 miles) or Corsica (230 miles). 3100 moorings:
    * 10 sheltered basins around a 35-hectare lake.
    * 6 sanitary blocks (toilets, showers, washbasins) with reserved access (electronic key).
    * Reserved parking for yachtsmen.
    * Fresh water and electricity (220 V mono and 380 V tri) at quayside.
    * Secure pontoons (electronic key access): berths are equipped with catways and, for larger units, with piles or deadbeds.
    * Special berths for multihulls.
    * 2 slipways (Avant Port).
    * European-standard waste disposal center.
    * Harbour dredged to 3 m.
  34. ^ "3 Marinas in Cap d'Agde". port-capdagde.com (in French).
  35. ^ "Découvrez le patrimoine religieux de l'ancienne cité épiscopale d'Agde". capdagde.com (in French).
  36. ^ "Le Château Laurens à Agde". Communauté urbaine d'Agde.
  37. ^ Daubrée, Anne (March 2023). "Le château Laurens, un envoûtant chef-d'œuvre Art nouveau aux couleurs de rêve". connaissancedesarts.com. Connaissance des arts. Monuments et Patrimoine
  38. ^ Félix, Laurent; Palouzié, Hélène; et al. (15 June 2023). LE CHÂTEAU LAURENS. Le Cherche-Midi. p. 200. Laurent Félix, head of the heritage department of the Hérault Méditerranée urban community. Hélène Palouzié, Regional Curator of Historic Monuments.
  39. ^ "AGDE - Le Moulin des Évêques a ouvert ses portes au public". herault-tribune.com. 8 April 2010.
  40. ^ Mission Patrimoine du Littoral exhibition in Ilot Molière
  41. ^ "AGDE - cave coopérative". cavescooperatives.fr. 7 March 2024.
  42. ^ "LE CAP D'AGDE - Le nouveau Centre de Sécurité Publique bientôt en service". 31 October 2020.
  43. ^ Pocher (23 November 2018). "Un nouveau centre de police mixte pour la ville d'Agde". France Bleu Hérault (in French).
  44. ^ Ephebe Museum Anniversary exhibition 2015
  45. ^ "L'Archipel la cité de l'eau, un voyage aquatique en Agde". Midi Libre (in French). 13 October 2015.
  46. ^ a b Raynaud, Olivier (16 December 2019). "La Maison des Savoirs rouvrira ses portes au printemps prochain". Midi Libre (in French).
  47. ^ Wood (6 June 2022). "La première tranche du projet Iconic, au Cap d'Agde, inaugurée". Batirama (in French).
  48. ^ Greffin (26 October 2021). "Le Cap d'Agde : un nouveau pôle shopping de 2 500 m2 au cœur du projet immobilier Iconic". herault-tribune.com (in French).
  49. ^ Belkacem (15 June 2017). "Projet : ce que sera le Cap d'Agde à la fin du XXIème siècle. REAMENAGEMENT" (in French).
  50. ^ Greffin, Elodie (19 September 2022). "Agde : 3 jours pour découvrir le nouveau Théâtre AGathois" (in French).
  51. ^ Sartre, Patrice. "La piraterie en mer" (in French). Études 2009/3 (Tome 410). pp. 295-304. "The fledgling United States fought its first war, from 1798 to 1801 in the West Indies, against the privateers of the young French Republic plundering American merchant ships. Building on the successes of this French Naval War (Engraved on the monument to the Marines in Arlington), the United States will pursue in the Mediterranean the Muslim "barbarians" who negotiated for ransom the merchant ships they had captured and their crews, one of the motivations for the capture of Algiers by France a few years later."
  52. ^ "AGDE - JewishEncyclopedia.com". Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  53. ^ Agde - Encyclopaedia Judaica | Encyclopedia.com
  54. ^ Peschanski, Denis (18 February 2009). "Les camps français d'internement (1938-1946) [Abstract : French Internment camps 1938-1946]" (PDF). HAL (open archive). p. 952. [facsimile hors ill. & cart., 2000, Thèse de doctorat d'État en Histoire, direction AntoineProst, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, 3 vol., 948 p., bibliogr. pp. 898-948, index.. Num. national de thèse 2000PA010665]
  55. ^ "Agde camp". archives municipales Agde (in French). 28 September 2021. After the Battle of France, the town mourned its soldiers who had died at the front, while concern grew for those who were now prisoners in Germany. At the town hall, Marshal Pétain's regime made its mark, the mayor was maintained and the town council was modified, while living conditions for the people of Agatha became tougher. At the time of the roundup in August 1942, the Agde camp was the assembly point for Israelites from the Hérault region. During these painful days, Sabine Zlatin was present, and obtained the release of around a hundred Jewish children.
    When the german occupying forces left, all that remained on the site were the pozzolan paths, which were soon covered by housing developments, but the memory of the people who lived there would live on.
    An essential memorial to the town's 20th-century history, the Agde camp monument stands today at the intersection of route des 7 Fonts and rue Jean Moulin, near the René Cassin secondary school. Inaugurated in 1989, it symbolically marks the entrance to the camp and pays tribute to all the nationalities who lived there.
  56. ^ "- Gale - Enter Product Login". galegroup.com.
  57. ^ "Les joutes, une tradition sur Agde depuis 1601 !". ville-agde.fr (in French). On the occasion of the arrival of the Duke of Montmorency, Henri I, Constable of France, a sumptuous tournament of jousts was organized in Agde. At that time, the jousts traditionally took place on the feast of Pentecost.
  58. ^ "France - RC Olympique Agathois - Results, fixtures, squad, statistics, photos, videos and news - Soccerway". soccerway.com.
  59. ^ "Spanish local corporations twinned with Europe". Spanish Federation of Municipalities and Provinces. Retrieved 30 October 2009.

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