Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Fouday

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Country
  
France

Department
  
Bas-Rhin

Time zone
  
CET (UTC+1)

Area
  
205 ha

Population
  
303 (1999)

Region
  
Grand Est

Canton
  
Mutzig

INSEE/Postal code
  
67144 /67130

Local time
  
Wednesday 11:54 AM

Arrondissement
  
Molsheim

Fouday httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Weather
  
14°C, Wind NE at 8 km/h, 62% Humidity

Fouday (German: Urbach) is a commune in the Bas-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.

Contents

Map of 67130 Fouday, France

At the start of 1975 Fouday was merged with the neighboring settlements of Waldersbach, Belmont and Bellefosse: the resulting aggregation was called Ban de la Roche, recalling a historical name for the territory. The Vosgean mountain village recovered its independence at the start of 1992: it has been incorporated into various administrative structures in recent decades and is currently one of 25 small settlements included in the Community of Haute-Bruche communes.

Geography

Fouday lies in the Bruche valley, on the right bank, at the river's confluence with the little River Chirgoutte (or Schirgoutte) surrounded by pastures and forests, and dominated by Mont Saint-Jean.

The village is served by the National Road (Route nationale) 420 which connects Strasbourg with Saint-Dié. The town is also traversed by the railway line - here just a single track - that connects these two urban centres. The mountain topography of the region keeps the road and railway running in close parallel along the Bruche Valley.

History

Fouday was part of the ancient lordship of Ban de la Roche along with the surrounding settlements of Waldersbach, Solbach, Belmont and Bellefosse.

The first surviving written record of the village dates from the fourteenth century, when it appeared in the records as Urbach. However, the village clearly existed by the end of the twelfth century, since the church building dates from that time.

During the late medieval period, the village church was a stage along the pilgrim route to Mont Sainte-Odile in Lorraine across the Vosges Mountains to the west. Evidence for this comes from the fifteenth century depiction of St. James in the old choir of the church. The church also contains a carved head of John the Baptist recalling the Baptist's demise: the carved head is the subject of a local pilgrimage tradition which still survives.

Despite the endurance of the pilgrimage tradition, the village joined the Protestant Reformation at the time of Pastor Marmet during the 1570s. Effectively all the villages within the Ban de la Roche became Protestant when the lands were sold by the Rathsamhausen family to the German Count Palatine, George John of Veldenz in the sixteenth century.

The village was the birthplace of Tommy Fallot (1844–1904), a Lutheran pastor who is considered the founder of Social Christianity in France.

References

Fouday Wikipedia