Last modified: 2006-12-23 by ivan sache
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Flag of Besançon - Image by Ivan Sache, 13 March 1999
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Besançon was initially the Roman city of Vesontio
(its ca. 120,000 inhabitants are still called Bisontins).
After the dark ages of the Barbaric invasions, Archbishop Hugh de
Salins reestablished a powerful town in 1031.
The former suzerains of the city, the Dukes of
Burgundy, kept for only privilege a burial
place in the town, and the Archbishop, as the feudal lord, recognized
only the nominal authority of the German Emperor.
However, the power of the Archbishop was still to heavy for the
burghers of Besançon. They conned Emperor Rudolf von Hapsburg
in 1290 by asking him to confirm a chart written by one of his
forbears. The chart was in fact a total forgery but the Emperor
confirmed it and Besançon became a Republic until the French
invasion.
In 1635, Cardinal de Richelieu, "Prime Minister" of King of France Louis XIII decided to invade the rich province of Comté. Richelieu's enemy, Gaston d'Orléans, brother of Louis XIII, had found shelter in Besançon, giving a "good" reason to Richelieu for the attack. The town was assaulted twice in 1668 and 1674, and became the capital city of Franche-Comté under Louis XIV.
Besançon was an important place of the industrial
revolution of the XIXth century. Count of Chardonnet founded here the
first factory of artificial silk (rayon) in 1890.
Besançon is the birth place of the writer Victor Hugo
(1802-1885), of the utopist Charles Fourier (1772-1837), of the Socialist
theoretician Pierre-Joseph Proud'hon (1809-1865) and of the brothers
Auguste (1862-1954) and Louis (1864-1948) Lumière, the
inventors of modern cinematography.
Source: Guide Vert Michelin Jura Franche-Comté (1992)
Ivan Sache, 9 July 2000
The flag of Besançon is the reverse of the Belgian flag, being vertically divided red-yellow-black.
Pascal Vagnat, 13 March 1999