Arbonne

{{about|the French village|the cosmetics company|Arbonne International}}

{{Infobox French commune

|name = Arbonne

|native name = Arbona

|commune status = Commune

|image = Arbonne (Pyr-Atl., Fr) mairie.JPG

|caption = The Town Hall

|image coat of arms = Blason_ville_fr_Arbonne_(Pyrénées-Atlantiques).svg

|arrondissement = Bayonne

|canton = Ustaritz-Vallées de Nive et Nivelle

|INSEE = 64035

|postal code = 64210

|mayor = Marie-Josèphe Mialocq{{cite web|title=Répertoire national des élus: les maires|url=https://www.data.gouv.fr/fr/datasets/r/2876a346-d50c-4911-934e-19ee07b0e503|publisher=data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises|date=13 September 2022|language=fr}}

|term = 2021–2026

|intercommunality = CA Pays Basque

|coordinates = {{coord|43.4328|-1.55|format=dms|display=inline,title}}

|elevation m = 21

|elevation min m = 5

|elevation max m = 94

|area km2 = 10.59

|population = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_total}}

|population date = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_as_of}}

|population footnotes = {{France metadata Wikidata|population_footnotes}}

}}

Arbonne ({{IPA|fr|aʁbɔn}}; {{langx|eu|Arbona}}) is a commune in French Basque Country, a region of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region of southwestern France.

Geography

Arbonne is located some 6 km south of Biarritz and 3 km east of Bidart. It is part of the Urban area of Bayonne and is located in the former province of Labourd. Access to the commune is by road D255 from Biarritz in the north passing through the village and continuing south to Saint-Pée-sur-Nivelle. The D655 branches off the D255 in the south of the commune and goes to Ahetze. The A63 autoroute passes through the northern tip of the commune but has no access from the commune. In the south of the commune is the hamlet of Le Hameau d'Arbonne. The rest of the commune is mainly farmland with patches of forest especially in the north.

Located in the drainage basin of the Adour, the commune is traversed by the Uhabia, a small coastal river that flows into the ocean at Bidart, and its tributaries: the Zirikolatzeko erreka and the Ruisseau d'Argelos.

The Ruisseau de Pemartin also flows through the commune and there is an extensive network of streams throughout the commune.[https://www.google.com/maps/place/Arbonne,+France/@43.420131,-1.553528,14z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0xd5115a8647f37df:0xf91bb0ca7777b95b Google Maps]

=Places and Hamlets=

{{div col|colwidth=14em}}

  • Aguerrea
  • Alhorga
  • Allexarrea
  • Arditegia
  • Arretxea
  • Berrueta
  • Cassoua
  • Diharzenea
  • Etchardia
  • Guichenea
  • Gure Egoitza
  • le Hameau d'Arbonne
  • Harriague
  • Hegoasea
  • Katalienea
  • Kuttuenea
  • Larreburua
  • Magnienea
  • Menta
  • Mestelan Beherea
  • Mestelania
  • Moleresia
  • Mundustenea
  • Pemartikoborda
  • Pemartin
  • Perukain
  • La Place
  • le Pouy
  • Saskoenea
  • Tribulenea
  • Xantxienea
  • Xokobia
  • Ziburria
  • Ziburriako Errota

{{div col end}}

Toponymy

The commune name in Basque is Arbona.[http://www.euskaltzaindia.net/index.php?option=com_eoda&view=toponimia&Itemid=471&nonkodea=4.4&lang=en Euskaltzaindia - Academy of the Basque language] (Basque)

Brigitte Jobbé-Duval indicated that 'Arbona meant "place of tree stumps".

The following table details the origins of the commune name and other names in the commune.

class="wikitable"
NameSpellingDateSourcePageOriginDescription
ArbonneNarbona1186Raymond{{center|9}}BayonneVillage
Narbone1349Orpustan
Alhorgako ErrekaL'Alhorga1863Raymond{{center|5}}A tributary of the Uhabia flowing from Saint-Pée-sur-Nivelle and Ahetze
BerruetaBerhouetta1863Raymond{{center|28}}Farm
HarriagueHarriague1863Raymond{{center|76}}Hamlet
HurmalagueHurmalague1863Raymond{{center|80}}Hamlet
MentaMenta1198Raymond{{center|112}}BayonneHamlet
Mente1523Raymond{{center|112}}Chapter
Mestelan BehereaMestelan1760Raymond{{center|112}}CollationsFarm (a prebend of this name was present in the Arbonne church)
Mesthelan1863Raymond{{center|112}}
PemartinPémartin1863Raymond{{center|133}}Farm
PerukainPerucam13th centuryRaymond{{center|134}}BayonneHamlet
Pérucain1863Raymond
La PlaceLa Place1863Raymond{{center|135}}Hamlet
Le Pouyla chapelle de Pouy près Bayonne1751Raymond{{center|139}}IntendanceFarm
Pouy1863Raymond{{center|139}}

Sources:

  • Raymond: [https://books.google.com/books?id=2TCHmbiipFIC Topographic Dictionary of the Department of Basses-Pyrenees], 1863, on the page numbers indicated in the table. {{in lang|fr}}[https://books.google.com/books?id=2TCHmbiipFIC Topographic Dictionary of the Department of Basses-Pyrenees], Paul Raymond, Imprimerie nationale, 1863, Digitised from Lyon Public Library 15 June 2011 {{in lang|fr}}

Origins:

  • Bayonne: Cartulary of Bayonne or Livre d'Or (Book of Gold)Manuscript from the 14th century in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques {{in lang|fr}}
  • Collations: Collations of the Diocese of BayonneManuscripts from the 17th and 18th centuries in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques {{in lang|fr}}
  • Chapter: Titles of the Chapter of BayonneChapter of Bayonne in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques {{in lang|fr}}
  • Intendance: Intendance of PauTitles of the intendance of Pau - Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques {{in lang|fr}}

History

The oldest lord of Arbonne whose names are known are from the Sault family, Viscounts of Labourd. At the end of the 14th century the lordship was owned by the Saint-Julien family (originally from Lower Navarre) and then in 1408 to the Amezqueta family.

The Act of 4 March 1790,Philippe Veyrin, The Basques, Arthaud, 1947, reprinted 1975, {{ISBN|2 7003 0038 6}}, p. 185 {{in lang|fr}} which determined the new administrative landscape of France by creating departments and districts, created the Department of Basses-Pyrénées to bring together Béarn, the Gascon lands in Bayonne and Bidache, and three French Basque provinces. For these three provinces three districts were created: Mauléon, Saint-Palais, and Ustaritz which replaced the Bailiwick of Labourd. The seat of Ustaritz was transferred almost immediately to Bayonne. Its Directorate pushed many municipalities into adopting new names conforming to the spirit of the Revolution. Arbonne was called Constante,{{Cassini-Ehess|1060|Arbonne}}. Ustaritz became Marat-sur-Nive, Itxassou Union, Saint-Étienne-de-Baïgorry Thermopyles, Saint-Palais Mont-Bidouze, Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port Nive-Franche, Louhossoa Montagne-sur-Nive, Saint-Jean-de-Luz Chauvin-Dragon, Ainhoa Mendiarte, and Souraïde Mendialde.

=Heraldry=

{{Blazon-arms

|img1=Blason_ville_fr_Arbonne_(Pyrénées-Atlantiques).svg

|legend1=Arms of Arbonne

|text=Adopted by the Town Council on 20 May 1988.Hubert Lamant-Duhart, Arbonne, Arbona, Collective work under the direction of Hubert Lamant-Duhart, Ekaina, 1988 {{in lang|fr}}

Blazon:

Or, a Tauzin oak Vert accompanied at sinister by a bear Sable attached to the trunk of the tree and at dexter two nails of Sable posed in chevron inverted.

}}

Administration

List of Successive MayorsHubert Lamant-Duhart in Arbonne, Arbona, Collective work under the direction of Hubert Lamant-Duhart, Ekaina, 1988, p. 213 {{in lang|fr}}[http://www.francegenweb.org/mairesgenweb/resultcommune.php?id=22144 List of Mayors of France]

{{Hidden begin

|title=Mayors from the French Revolution to 1943

|titlestyle = background:palegreen;

}}

class="wikitable"
FromToName
1790?1794Daguerre
17941795Dominique Duhart (Mayor of Constante which united Arbonne, Arcangues, and Bassussarry)
1795Jean Laborde (Mayor of Constante)
18141817Pierre Landaboure
18171822Jean Diharce
18221823Martin Hegoas
18231827Charles Borotra
18271840Mathieu Duhart
18401842Hirigoyen
18421849Doyhenard
18491859Laborde
18591864Michel Dokhelar
18641876Laurent Hirigoyen
18761881Jean Dufau
18811896Jean Borotra
18961904Jean Dufau
19041943Bernard Housset

{{Hidden end}}

;Mayors from 1943

class="wikitable"
FromToName
19431945Jean Hegoas
19451948Émile Martin
19531971André Gromard
19711977Didier Borotra
19771995Bernard Abeberry
19952008Jean Bareille
20082026Marie-Josèphe Mialocq

=Inter-communality=

Arbonne is part of nine inter-communal structures:

  • the Communauté d'agglomération du Pays Basque;
  • the SIVOM of Arbonne-Arcangues-Bassussarry;
  • the SIVU of Arbonne-Bidart;
  • the Ouhabia association;
  • the mixed association of Bizi Garbia;
  • the Association for promotion of basque culture;
  • the mixed association for management of Ura drinking water;
  • the mixed association for sanitation in Ura;
  • the Energy association of Pyrénées-Atlantiques.

The commune is part of the Eurocité basque Bayonne-San Sebastian (fr) (a cross-border association to develop the area from Bayonne in France to San Sebastian in Spain).

Demography

The inhabitants of the commune are known as Arbonars in French.[https://www.habitants.fr/pyrenees-atlantiques-64 Pyrénées-Atlantiques], habitants.frBrigitte Jobbé-Duval, Dictionary of place names - Pyrénées-Atlantiques, 2009, Archives and Culture, {{ISBN|978-2-35077-151-9}} {{in lang|fr}}

{{Historical populations

| align = none

| cols = 2

| percentages = pagr

| source = EHESS and INSEE[https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/4515315?geo=COM-64035#ancre-POP_T1 Population en historique depuis 1968], INSEE

| graph-pos = bottom

|1793 |608

|1800 |555

|1806 |560

|1821 |520

|1831 |690

|1836 |745

|1841 |715

|1846 |708

|1851 |700

|1856 |685

|1861 |700

|1866 |705

|1872 |733

|1876 |724

|1881 |790

|1886 |800

|1891 |770

|1896 |759

|1901 |764

|1906 |789

|1911 |788

|1921 |689

|1926 |763

|1931 |866

|1936 |980

|1946 |763

|1954 |614

|1962 |628

|1968 |648

|1975 |819

|1982 |1196

|1990 |1366

|1999 |1375

|2007 |1855

|2012 |2075

|2017 |2223

}}

Economy

The commune is part of the Appellation d'origine contrôlée (AOC) zone of Ossau-iraty.

Culture and heritage

File:ARBONNE - Eglise Saint-Laurent 02.jpg

File:Arbonne Benoiterie.jpg

File:Arbonne - Église Saint-Laurent - 2.jpg in the cemetery]]

According to the Map of the Seven Basque Provinces by Prince Louis-Lucien Bonaparte the basque dialect spoken in Arbonne is northern Upper Navarrese

=Religious heritage=

The commune has two buildings that are registered as historical monuments:

  • The Church of Saint-Laurent (12th century).{{Mérimée Icon}}Ministry of Culture, Mérimée {{Mérimée|PA00084554|PA00084554 Church of Saint-Laurent}} {{in lang|fr}} It is of a medium size with an arched Bell-gable characteristic of Labourd religious buildings. Some old Hilarri are visible in the cemetery.
  • The old Benoîterie d'Arbonne (16th century){{Mérimée Icon}}Ministry of Culture, Mérimée {{Mérimée|PA00084551|PA00084551 Benoîterie d'Arbonne}} {{in lang|fr}} The Benoîterie was the residence of the Benoîte or guardian of the church and cemetery and is now the venue for exhibitions (paintings, crafts).

Facilities

;Health

The commune has a general practitioner, three nurses, a speech therapist, a physiotherapist, and a dentist - all in the village centre.

;Education

Arbonne has two primary schools, one public and one private (Saint-Laurent school)

Notable people linked to the commune

  • Jean Borotra - called the Basque bondissant (the Bounding Basque), born in 1898 at Biarritz and died in 1994 at Arbonne, a tennis player and French politician
  • Bernard Béreau, born in 1940 at Arbonne and died in 2005, he was a French footballer
  • Marie-Michèle Beaufils, born in 1949 at Arbonne, she is a contemporary writer

See also

=Bibliography=

  • Arbonne, Arbona, Collective work under the direction of Hubert Lamant-Duhart, Ekaina, 1988 {{in lang|fr}}

References

{{Reflist|2}}