Le Tholonet (French pronunciation:[lə tɔlɔnɛ]; Lou Toulounet and Lo Tolonet in Provençal) is a commune in the Bouches-du-Rhône department in southern France. Its inhabitants are called Tholonétiens.
The hamlet of Palette, which gives its name to the Palette AOC appellation, is located on the commune's territory.[3]
History
The earliest signs of human presence can be dated back to the Iron Age, and are located in the Infernet and Espinades ranges.[4]
In the nineteenth century, a small oppidum named "Ragabom camp" or "Ratabom camp" was discovered at the Infernet site.[4] The camp consists of fortifications build with large stone blocks. The ruins are barely discernible today. Archeological surveys done from 1979-1980 helped discover furnishings dated from the Iron Ages up to the 2nd century BC, a time when the site was highly populated.[4]
Population
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±%
1793
470
—
1800
350
−25.5%
1806
489
+39.7%
1821
465
−4.9%
1831
501
+7.7%
1836
514
+2.6%
1841
540
+5.1%
1846
504
−6.7%
1851
602
+19.4%
1856
546
−9.3%
1861
540
−1.1%
1866
508
−5.9%
1872
501
−1.4%
1876
510
+1.8%
1881
506
−0.8%
1886
497
−1.8%
1891
505
+1.6%
1896
513
+1.6%
1901
466
−9.2%
1906
429
−7.9%
1911
383
−10.7%
1921
400
+4.4%
1926
402
+0.5%
1931
415
+3.2%
1936
421
+1.4%
1946
484
+15.0%
1954
592
+22.3%
1962
720
+21.6%
1968
953
+32.4%
1975
1,137
+19.3%
1982
1,186
+4.3%
1990
2,004
+69.0%
1999
2,259
+12.7%
2008
2,227
−1.4%
Sights
Moulin Cezanne
The Château du Tholonet (in its current form) was built by Alexandre de Galliffet in the 1640s. Galliffet had bought the plot from the Jarente family, and was president of the Aix-en-Provence parliament. His grandson Louis-François added a theater for his mistress Émilie de Marignane, wife of the famous orator Mirabeau. A marble cutting mill was used for Tholonet marble, known under the name Brêche d'Alep. Currently, the domain is owned by the Société du Canal de Provence (SCP).
Moulin Cezanne, an old windmill that has been restored. Currently it is used to host painting and sculpture exhibitions.
Ruins of the Roman aqueduct that brought water from Saint-Antonin to Aix-en-Provence. This fifteen-kilometre aqueduct bridge, located in the Cause ravine, had a rate of nearly 80 liters per second and was one of four aqueducts that supplied Aquae Sextiae, Aix-en-Provence during the Roman period. The Aix painter Jean-Antoine Constantin drew sketches of it, which are now in the Aix-en-Provence Méjanes libraries.[4]
"Carte archéologique de la Gaule: Aix-en-Provence, pays d'Aix, val de Durance", 13/4, Fl. Mocci, N. Nin (dir.), Paris, 2006, Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, ministère de l'Éducation nationale, ministère de la Recherche, ministère de la Culture et de la Communication, maison des Sciences de l'homme, centre Camille-Jullian, ville d'Aix-en-Provence, communauté du pays d'Aix, p. 684-90.
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