- Source: Flers, Orne
Flers (French pronunciation: [flɛʁ]) is a commune in the Orne department in Normandy, France. The inhabitants are called Flériens in French.
Geography
Flers is bordered to the north by the communes of Saint-Georges-des-Groseillers and Aubusson, to the north-east by Ronfeugerai, to the west by La Lande-Patry and Saint-Paul, to the south-west by La Chapelle-Biche, La Chapelle-au-Moine and Messei, and to the south-east by La Selle-la-Forge.
The commune is situated in the north-west of the Orne département, about ten kilometres from the border of the Calvados, an hour east of Granville, and two hours by train from Paris. It depends on a prefecture located an hour north in Caen.
The commune is crossed by the river Vère which ends in the river Noireau in Pont-Erembourg (commune of Saint-Denis-de-Méré).
= Climate
=Flers is part of the region that stretches from the Bocage to the Écouves forest, the wettest part of the Orne département, with relatively mild temperatures thanks to its proximity to the English Channel and the effect of the sea. It benefits from an oceanic climate with mild winters and temperate summers.
History
The first written mentions of Flers appear at the end of the twelfth century as Flers (1164–1179) or Flex (1188–1221). Some authors think that the name of the town derives from the German toponym Hlaeri, meaning wasteland or common grazing land, while others suggest an origin in the German Fliessen, from the Dutch vliet or the Latin fluere Latin Fluere, indicating a waterflow, basin or marsh. Yet another etymology links Flers to the Latin flexus, meaning the bend in a road or river. Finally, the Breton term fler or flear means bad smell, indicating the stench of stagnant water. All etymologies seem to agree however that the town is named for its topography and the water close to it.
= Middle Ages
=From the tenth century on, the de Flers family headed a barony. Tradition has it that in the 11th century, the two brothers Foulques d'Aunou and Guillaume de Gasprée married two sisters who were Ladies of Flers. Foulques d'Aunou received as his wedding gift Flers, seat of the barony.
The construction of the castle of Flers began in the 12th century as a fortified location of wood and stone surrounded by water. The chronicles of the Hundred Years War do not mention a fortified place in Flers, revealing that it didn't present a major strategic interest at the time.
= Construction of the castle
=In 1790, in the revolutionary period, Flers formed a canton in the district of Domfront, in the Orne département. The countess of Flers, Jacqueline Le Goué de Richemont, wife of Pierre-François de Paule de La Motte-Ango, supported the counter-revolutionary chouans. The castle of Flers became the headquarters of count Louis de Frotté, one of the leaders of the Normandic Chouannerie.
= Industrial Revolution
=In 1901, Julien Salles, mayor of Flers, bought the castle for the community.
= World War II
=Like other towns near the D-Day landing, Flers was one of the targets of strategic bombing of Normandy on 6 and 7 June 1944, aimed at reducing the advance of German reinforcements. 80% of the town was destroyed. What remained of the town was liberated on 16 August by the British 11th Armoured Division and the memorial to the division is at Pont de Vère, north of Flers.
= Heraldry
=Demographics
Transport
Flers station is served by TER Normandie trains between Paris and Granville. It has a local bus system for Flers and the surrounding communities, and departmental lines connecting it with other major towns in Orne and Calvados.
L'aérodrome Flers-Saint-Paul is an aerodrome bordering Flers in the neighbouring commune of La Lande-Patry that opened in 1937. Its ICAO airport code is LFOG. It has a 742 meter paved runway.
Monuments and interesting places
The castle, dating back to the 16th and 18th century, houses a museum of ancient and 19th century paintings and sculptures, applied art (furniture and decoration) and local history. The castle was registered as a Monument historique in 1907.
Flers has another building registered as a monument, the Chapel of Remembrance (Also known as the chapel of the minor seminary), which was built between from 1926 to 1932 to commemorate those fallen from the First World War. It features work by Prix de Rome winning artist, Emile Beaume and stained glass artist Louis Barillet. It was registered as a monument in 2006.
Other interesting visits are the early 20th century neo-gothic Saint-Germain church and the 19th century neo-Romanesque Saint-Jean church, and the covered market built in 1883 on a former cemetery.
Notable people
Louis Barrabé (1895–1961), geologist, buried here
Paulette Duhalde (1921–1945), heroine of the resistance, died when deported to Ravensbrück
= Born in Flers
=Jean-Pierre Brard, politician
Henri Brière, politician
Tony Chapron, international football (soccer) referee
Gérard Larcher, President of the Senate of France
Patrice Lecornu (1958–2023), professional football (soccer) player
Alain Lemercier, racewalker
Guy Mollet, politician
François Morel, comedian, writer and singer
Thibault Moulin, footballer who plays for Legia Warsaw
Twin towns
Flers is twinned with:
Warminster, England, since 1973
Poundou, Burkina Faso, since 1977
Wunstorf, Germany, since 1994
Charleston, South Carolina, USA, since 2022
See also
Communes of the Orne department
References
External links
Official local sites
Official site of the agglomeration
Tourist Office
Castle of Flers Museum Archived 2009-08-19 at the Wayback Machine
Maps
National geographic institute
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Komune di departemen Orne
- Orne
- Saint-Clair-de-Halouze
- Gérard Larcher
- Verrières, Orne
- Aubusson, Orne
- Autheuil, Orne
- Dompierre, Orne
- Trémont, Orne
- Saint-Nicolas-des-Bois, Orne
- Flers, Orne
- Flers
- Tony Chapron
- Communauté d'agglomération Flers Agglo
- Gérard Larcher
- Orne
- Henri Brière
- Jean-Claude Ruiz
- Patrice Lecornu
- Jean-Pierre Brard