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Artix, Pyrénées Atlantiques

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Country
  
France

Department
  
Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Intercommunality
  
Communes de Lacq

Area
  
9.11 km²

Local time
  
Saturday 7:52 PM

Region
  
Nouvelle-Aquitaine

Canton
  
Arthez-de-Béarn

Time zone
  
CET (UTC+1)

Population
  
3,153 (2006)

Arrondissement
  
Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Artix, Pyrénées-Atlantiques

Weather
  
10°C, Wind NE at 6 km/h, 57% Humidity

Artix is a French commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region of south-western France.

Contents

Map of 64170 Artix, France

The inhabitants of the commune are known as Artisiens or Artisiennes.

Geography

Artix is located some 12 km north-west of Lescar and 14 km south-east of Orthez. Access to the commune is by main road D817 from Lacq in the north-west passing through the commune and south of the town and continuing south-east to Denguin. Access to the town from the D817 is on the D280 which links the two ends of the bypass. There are also the D263 road going north to Urdès, the D663 going north-east to Serres-Sainte-Marie, the D32 going east to Cescau, and the D281 going south-east to join the D33 north-west of Noguères. The A64 autoroute also passes through the north-eastern corner with Exit 9 exiting to the D817 in the commune.

The SNCF Toulouse-Bayonne railway line also passes through the commune with a station just south of the town centre. The Interurban network of Pyrénées-Atlantiques busline has two routes passing through the commune: Route 801 (Orthez-Pau) and Route 802 (Artix-Pau).

Apart from the town there are the villages of Cap de Lalanne and Le Plateau. Some 40% of the commune is residential with the balance farmland with patches of forest.

The Gave de Pau flows north-west past the southern border of the commune with some branches touching the border. The Ruisseau Laulouze flows from the east through the south of the commune and joins Le Ruisseau which flows north-west parallel to the Gave de Pau until it joins the river west of the commune just south of Lacq. The Agle also flows west through the northern corner of the commune to join the Gave de Pau south of Lacq.

Toponymy

The name Artix appears in the forms:

  • Artits (1286),
  • Artics (13th century, Fors de Béarn),
  • Artidz (1350, Notaries of Pardies),
  • Artitz (1385, Census of Béarn),
  • Arthitz (1440, Census of Bastide-Monréjau),
  • Artixs (1538, Reformation of Béarn),
  • Artix in 1583, in the Reformation of Béarn, and on the Cassini Map of 1750.
  • Its name in béarnais is Artics. Michel Grosclaude indicated that the name Artix possibly was formed from the mediterranean radical arte ("green oak" then "undergrowth") and the collective and locative basque suffix -itz. He proposed them in the sense "Vegetation of the undergrowth".

    Laviecave is a hamlet mentioned in 1863 but Paul Raymond recommended the spelling La Vie-Cave, meaning the sunken way or path: la via cava.

    History

    The commune once had a Lay Abbey, vassal of the Viscounts of Béarn. In 1385 Artix was a small village under the bailiwick of Pau with only 10 fires grouped around the church. In 1880 the old church was demolished. The new church was opened in 1899.

    The village became a city after the creation of the Royal Road under Henri IV which then became Imperial Route 117, then the Route nationale 117. This opening up allowed the market at Artix to flourish and the city to grow in importance.

    Administration

    List of Successive Mayors

    (Not all data is known)

    Inter-communality

    The commune is part of five inter-communal structures:

  • the Community of communes of Lacq;
  • the SIVU for the Agle and the Lacq;
  • the association for water and sanitation of Trois Cantons;
  • the Energy association of Pyrénées-Atlantiques;
  • the inter-communal association for defence against flooding of the Gave de Pau;
  • Twinning

    Artix has twinning associations with:

  • Sacedón (Spain) since 1992.
  • Song-naaba (Burkina Faso) since 1995.
  • Demography

    In 2010 the commune had 3,471 inhabitants. The evolution of the number of inhabitants is known from the population censuses conducted in the commune since 1793. From the 21st century, a census of communes with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants is held every five years, unlike larger towns that have a sample survey every year.

    Population Change (See database)

    Sources : Ldh/EHESS/Cassini until 1962, INSEE database from 1968 (population without double counting and municipal population from 2006)

    Economy

    Artix has a prevention plan for technological risks due to some chemical establishments in the commune, similar to Bésingrand, Os-Marsillon, Noguères, Mourenx, and Pardies.

    The Groupe Olano has a site in Artix specialising in the storage and transport of chocolate.

    Religious heritage

    The Parish Church of Saint-Pierre (19th century) is registered as an historical monument.

    Cultural and environmental heritage

    The Béarnais polyphonic group Los Pagalhós, created in the 1970s, was born in Artix.

    Villages in Béarn are permitted to display street signs in Occitan. Artix was the first commune in France of more than 3,000 inhabitants to implement Bilingual signs throughout the commune in occitan (Gascon béarnais) and French. Consequently, its signs show its name as "Artics", since the letter X is little used in the Bearnais dialect.

    Artix also has an Occitan language school or Calandreta.

    Education

    Artix has two elementary schools (Moulin and Sarrailh), one college (College Jean Moulin), and one calandreta with a childcare nursery and a primary school.

    Sports and associations

  • Artix Basketball Club.
  • Notable people linked to the commune

  • Maurice Plantier, born in 1921 at Biarritz and died in 2006 at Paris, was a French politician. He was mayor of Artix from 1960 to 1989.
  • References

    Artix, Pyrénées-Atlantiques Wikipedia