Ahaxe-Alciette-Bascassan
Ahatsa-Alzieta-Baskazane | |
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Coordinates: 43°09′04″N 1°09′50″W / 43.151°N 1.164°W | |
Country | France |
Region | Nouvelle-Aquitaine |
Department | Pyrénées-Atlantiques |
Arrondissement | Bayonne |
Canton | Montagne Basque |
Intercommunality | Pays Basque |
Government | |
• Mayor (2020–2026) | Jean-Paul Bidart[1] |
Area 1 | 14.64 km2 (5.65 sq mi) |
Population (2021)[2] | 263 |
• Density | 18/km2 (47/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) |
INSEE/Postal code | 64008 /64220 |
Elevation | 207–788 m (679–2,585 ft) (avg. 265 m or 869 ft) |
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. |
Ahaxe-Alciette-Bascassan (French pronunciation: [a.aks alsjɛt baskasɑ̃]; Basque: Ahatsa-Alzieta-Baskazane)[3] is a commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region in southwestern France.
The people of the commune are known as Ahastar.[4]
Ahaxe-Alciette-Bascassan is part of Cize/Garazi country which was a historical province in Lower Navarre. It includes three former parishes, sometimes counted as four groups of houses in the Middle Ages[5] and with five toponyms: Alciette, Ahaxe, Garatehegi, Ligeta, and Bascassan located at the confluence of the Laurhibar and Esteneko streams.
Alciette is the parish farthest away to the northeast in the combination of the three parishes.
Ahaxe-Alciette-Bascassan is located some 6 km south-east of Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port and can be accessed by Highway D18 running from close to there through the heart of the commune southeast to Lecumberry. The village is not on the highway and is left onto the country road Vierge-d'Ahaxe off the D18 heading southeast. There is a country road from Aincille in the west to the village of Bascassin in the commune and there are other country roads entering from the north and the southeast.[6]
The commune is located in the Drainage basin of the Adour, the commune lands are watered by the Laurhibar, a tributary of the Nive, and a tributary of that, the Esteneko stream. The Apatéko stream, a tributary of the Arzubiko stream also crosses the territory of Ahaxe-Alciette-Bascassan.
The commune's name in Basque is Ahatsa-Alzieta-Baskazane.[3][18]
The toponym Ahaxe appears in the forms:
Jean-Baptiste Orpustan[5] indicates that the toponym comes from the Basque oronymic base of (h)aitz meaning "rock" or "height".
The people of the commune are called in Basque Ahatsar.[5]
The toponym Alciette appears in the forms:
The Basque name for the people of this area is Alzietar.[5]
According to Jean-Baptiste Orpustan,[5] Alciette is derived from the medieval Alzueta which itself comes from the Basque alzu meaning "place where there are abundant alder trees".
The name Bascassan appears in the forms:
Its origin is uncertain.[5] The people of the area are called Bazkazandar in basque.[5]
Ahaxachillo is mentioned in the 1863 dictionary.[7])
Bastida is also indicated by Raymond.[9]
Errékaldéa is mentioned with the spelling Errecaldia referring to the flowing stream of Bascassan flowing into the Laurhibar.[28]
Curutchet (also called Garat) was a former fief of Ahaxe, a vassal of the Kingdom of Navarre.[10]
Paul Raymond mentioned an Etcheberry, a fief located in the parish of Alciette and a vassal of the Kingdom of Navarre.[12]
The name Garatehegi appears in the forms:
Garatehegi from Basque means "summit of the high country".[5]
Gastelua appears with the spelling Gastellu in 1863.[14]
Libiéta is a toponym that appears in the forms:
Ligeta is mentioned in the forms:
The origin of this toponym could be the Latin Liger[5] (which was equally likely to be the origin of Loire).
The Lordship of Ahaxe, also called the Lordship of Cize, was allied with the Viscounts of Arbéroue in the 11th century as well as the lordships of Guiche and to the Counts of Biscay.[5]
Ahaxe and Alciette-Bascassan were reunited on 11 June 1842.[18]
Blazon: Quarterly at one and four party per pale Azure with three escallops of Argent and Or with three bars in gules; at two gules with three escallops of Argent and bordure engrailed in Argent; at three Argent with bend engrailed in gules between two escallops gules.
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List of Successive Mayors of Ahaxe-Alciette-Bascassan[30]
From | To | Name | Party |
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1995 | 2008 | Simone Ithurbide | |
2008 | 2026 | Jean-Paul Bidart | DVD |
The commune belongs to seven inter-communal structures:[31]
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Source: EHESS[32] and INSEE[33] |
Economic activity is mainly agricultural. The commune is part of the zone designation of the Ossau-Iraty cheese.
According to the Map of the Seven Basque Provinces published in 1863 by Prince Louis-Lucien Bonaparte, the Basque dialect spoken in Ahaxe-Alciette-Bascassan is eastern low Navarrese.
There is a gaztelu zahar (a prehistoric fortified complex) at a place called Gaztalepo (Ahaxe), located 550 metres above sea level. There is also a lice or a fence surrounding a fortification running at 313 metres above sea level at a place called Gaztelua or Gastellia. These artifacts represent the ancient past of the commune.
There are several buildings, houses, and farms in the commune that are listed as historical monuments. These are:
A number of churches and sites in the commune have been classified as historical monuments. These are:
The commune has a kindergarten.