1,153–2,642m (3,783–8,668ft) (avg. 1,200m or 3,900ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1km2 (0.386sqmi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
The name of its inhabitants is Vernetois[3] or Vernetiers.
Geography
Le Vernet and neighbouring communes
The village of Le Vernet is located in the Bès[fr] Valley at 1,200 metres (3,900ft) altitude.[4] Its population does not exceed 100 permanent residents, but it is often more than doubled each summer and winter, when the municipality becomes the place of departure for sightseeing excursions, particularly in the Blanche[fr] Valley, and a place of departure for the nearby ski stations (Grand-Puy, Saint-Jean-Montclar[fr] and Chabanon).
The municipality has two main villages, Haut-Vernet, perched high and Bas-Vernet below.
Geology
During the two last major glaciations, the Riss glaciation and the Würm glaciation, a glacier was present in the upper part of the Riou de la Montagne Valley. During the Riss glaciation, a diffluence[de] of the Blanche glacier crossed the Col de Maure and reached approximately to the location of the village of the current Bas-Vernet. The diffluence was reproduced during the Würm period, but did not reach the territory of Vernet.[5]
Relief
The Pic des Têtes, at 2,642 metres (8,668ft), is located within the territory of the commune, as well as the Col du Labouret[fr], in the Massif des Trois-Évêchés.
Environment
The commune comprises 689 hectares (1,700 acres) of woods and forests.[3]
Transport
The steel-decked bridge across the Bès
Natural and technological hazards
None of the 200 communes of the Department is in the zero seismic risk zone. The Canton of Seyne, to which Le Vernet belongs, is in zone 1b (low seismicity) determined by the 1991 classification, based on the historical earthquakes,[6] and in zone 4 (medium risk) according to the probabilistic classification EC8 of 2011.[7] The municipality of Le Vernet is also exposed to four other natural hazards:[7]
Avalanche
Forest fire
Flooding
Ground movement
The commune of Le Vernet is more exposed to a risk of technological origin, that of transport of dangerous goods by road.[8] The departmentale[fr] RD 900 (the former Route nationale 100[fr]) can be used for the road transport of dangerous goods.[9]
A predictable natural risk prevention plan[fr] (PPR) doesn't exist for the commune[8] and DICRIM[fr] does not exist either.[10]
History remembers two earthquakes to have been strongly felt in the town. They exceeded a macro-seismic intensity level V on the MSK scale (sleepers awake, falling objects). The specified intensities are those felt in the town, the intensity can be stronger at the epicentre:[11]
The earthquake of 22 March 1949 had an intensity level V, and with Le Lauzet at the epicentre[12]
The earthquake of 31 October 1997 had an intensity level V, and with Prads-Haute-Bléone at the epicentre[13]
Toponymy
According to the Fénie couple, the name of Le Vernet refers to alder.[14]
History
During antiquity, the Bodiontiques (Bodiontici) lived in the Bléone Valley, and were therefore the Gallic people who lived in the current municipality of Vernet. The Bodiontiques, who were defeated by Augustus at the same time as other peoples present on the Tropaeum Alpium (before 14 BC), are attached to the province of Alpes Maritimae at its inception.[15]
The town appears for the first time in charters in the 11th century.[16] The Priory of Saint-Clément was under the Abbey of Saint-Victor in Marseille, via the Priory of Chaudol (now in La Javie).[17] The priory decided the questes and the taille, the lord decided the cavalcade and the albergue.[17] The Comte of Provence Ramon Berenguer IV granted to the community, who reported to the Bailli of Seyne, a consulate[fr] in the 13th century.[16]
In the Middle Ages, the great road of Digne to Seyne passed, descending from the Col du Labouret, by Haut-Vernet, without following the Bès Valley.[17]
In 1602, the trial exploitation of a vein of copper was cut short, the deposit actually being very poor. As early as 1604, the owners couldn't pay the workers, some were sent to Villevieille and Verdaches. These mines were given a new concession in 1614, without which their operation would never have restarted.[18]
During the French Revolution, the town had a patriotic society[fr], created after the end of 1792.[19]
As with many communes of the Department, Le Vernet acquired schools well before the Jules Ferry laws: In 1863, it had one each at Haut-Vernet and Bas-Vernet, which provide a primary education for boys.[20] While the Falloux Laws of 1851 required the opening of a girls school for communes with more than 800 inhabitants,[21] and the first Duruy Law[fr] of 1867 lowered the threshold to 500 inhabitants, Le Vernet nevertheless opened a school for girls, ahead of the laws.[22] The commune took advantage of subsidies from the second Duruy Law in 1877 to build a new school at Haut-Vernet.[23]
In 2017, Le Vernet had 123 inhabitants. From the 21st century, communes with less than 10,000 inhabitants have a census held every five years (2004, 2009 and 2014, etc. for the Vernet). Since 2004, the other figures are estimates.
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±%
1471
18 feus
—
1765
293
—
1793
300
+2.4%
1800
310
+3.3%
1806
329
+6.1%
1821
336
+2.1%
1831
314
−6.5%
1836
328
+4.5%
1841
322
−1.8%
1846
327
+1.6%
1851
287
−12.2%
1856
276
−3.8%
1861
268
−2.9%
Year
Pop.
±%
1866
271
+1.1%
1872
244
−10.0%
1876
249
+2.0%
1881
263
+5.6%
1886
265
+0.8%
1891
238
−10.2%
1896
243
+2.1%
1901
225
−7.4%
1906
226
+0.4%
1911
213
−5.8%
1921
154
−27.7%
1926
135
−12.3%
1931
138
+2.2%
Year
Pop.
±%
1936
124
−10.1%
1946
130
+4.8%
1954
109
−16.2%
1962
85
−22.0%
1968
180
+111.8%
1975
140
−22.2%
1982
63
−55.0%
1990
110
+74.6%
1999
104
−5.5%
2007
129
+24.0%
2012
123
−4.7%
2017
129
+4.9%
Population without double counting from 1962 to 1999; municipal population from 2006 Source: Baratier[fr], Georges Duby & Hildesheimer[fr] for the Ancien Régime,[16] EHESS (1793-1999)[29] and INSEE (1968-2017)[30]
The demographic history of Le Vernet, after the depopulation of the 14th and 15th centuries and long movement of growth until the beginning of the 19th century, is marked by a period of 'spread' where the population remains stable at a high level. This period lasts from 1806 to 1846. The rural exodus[fr] then caused a rapid decline in population, most importantly a long-term movement. Between 1911 and 1921, the municipality records the loss of more than half of its population (relative to the historic maximum).[31] The downward movement is interrupted only in the 1980s. Since then, the population has doubled.
This section needs expansionwith: the histogram from the same position in the French article. You can help by adding to it. (April 2015)
Education
The fountain in Bas-Vernet
The town depends on the Academy of Aix-Marseille[fr].[32] It has a primary school, consisting of 9 students.[33]
Religion
The Catholic parish of Le Vernet depends on the Diocese of Digne, Riez and Sisteron.[34]
Local culture and heritage
Sites and monuments
In Bas-Vernet, the parish church of Sainte-Marthe dates from the 19th century.[17]
At Haut-Vernet, the Saint-Martin Church[17] is also from the 19th century.
The chapel of Saint-Pancrace, isolated above Haut-Vernet, is the old parish church. Ruined by the European wars of religion, it was rebuilt, and its roof was repaired again in the 20th century.[17]
The Oratory of Saint-Roch
Notable people
Gaspard Laurent Bayle, physician to Napoleon
Prosper Demontzey[fr] has a monument at the Col du Labouret[fr]
Heraldry
Main article: [[:Armorial of the communes of Alpes-de-Haute-Provence[fr]]]
Arms of Le Vernet
The arms of Prads-Haute-Bléone are blazoned: Gold to a tree of vert on a terrace of the same docked two stars of gules.[35]
List of ancient communes in Alpes-de-Haute-Provence[fr]
Bibliography
Collier, Raymond (1986). La Haute-Provence monumentale et artistique [The monumental and artistic Haute-Provence] (in French). Digne: Imprimerie Louis Jean.
Baratier, Édouard; Duby, Georges; Hildesheimer, Ernest (1969). Atlas historique. Provence, Comtat Venaissin, principauté d'Orange, comté de Nice, principauté de Monaco [Historical Atlas. Comtat Venaissin, Principality of Orange, County of Nice, Provence, Principality of Monaco] (in French). Paris: Librairie Armand Colin. (BnF no. FRBNF35450017h)
de La Torre, Michel (1989). Alpes-de-Haute-Provence: le guide complet des 200 communes[Alpes-de-Haute-Provence: The complete guide to the 200 communes] (in French). Paris: Deslogis-Lacoste. ISBN2-7399-5004-7.
Jorda, Maurice; Miramont, Cécile (2008). Les Hautes Terres de Provence: itinérances médiévales[Highlands of Provence: medieval roaming] (in French). Cairo: Association Les hautes terres de Provence; Saint-Michel-l'Observatoire. p.33. ISBN978-2-952756-43-3.
"Notice communale". Ministère de l’Écologie, du développement durable, des transports et du logement. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
Vidal, Christiane (1971). "Chronologie et rythmes du dépeuplement dans le département des Alpes de Haute- Provence depuis le début du XIX' siècle" [Timeline and rhythms of the depopulation in the Department of Alpes de Haute - Provence since the beginning of the 19th century] (in French). 21 (85). Provence historique: 287.{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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