Last modified: 2005-12-24 by ivan sache
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Municipal flag of Sarreguemines - Image by Arnaud Leroy, 6 February 2005
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The city of Sarreguemines (23,774 inhabitants; 29.67 sq. km) is located in theEast of France, close to the border with Germany. Sarreguemines is 80 km of Metz, 90 km of Nancy, 100 km of Strasbourg and 20 km of Sarrebrück.
In 777, Fulrad, a councillor of Pépin le Bref and Charlemagne,
bequeathed his goods and domains to the St. Denis' royal abbey. Among
Fulrad's goods was a big estate located on the confluency of the rivers
Sarre (German, Saar) and Blies. The name of Sarreguemines (Saargemund) is related to the roots
Gemundia (Latin) and Gmund (German), meaning confluency.
The Sarreguemines farm was fortified in order to control the ford on
the Sarre and to perceive a tax (tonlieu). Progressively, a small
city surrounded with walls developed around a castle built on the hill
dominating the river (Schlossberg; lit., the castle's mountain). In
1125, the lord representing the St. Denis' abbey exchanged with Duke
of Lorraine Ferry III Sarreguemines for lands located near
Bitche. Sarreguemines was then the see of a châtellenie, that is an
administrative and military division of the Duchy of Lorraine.
In the same period, the Brabant road linking Flanders to Italy was
opened via the St. Gothard pass in the Alps; Sarreguemines became an
important trade city on this road. In the XIVth century, the city was
granted a franchise and became independent of the feudal powers. Jewish
and Lombard moneymakers contributed to the development of the city.
In 1523, Sarreguemines had three fairs per year and was very wealthy. However, the city was trashed during the guerre des rustauds in 1525 and the Thirty Years' War (1632-1662). Sarreguemines was incorporated to the Kingdom of France in 1679. An attempt of resettlement of the city failed because of Louis XIV's wars. In 1698, the Duchy of Lorraine was reestablished and Sarreguemines became the see of the Bailiwick of Germany, one of the four administrative divisions of the Duchy, corresponding to the German-speaking part of Lorraine. From 1700 to 1735, the city developed and grew up out of the medieval city walls. Lorraine was progessively incorporated into the Kingdom of France; importation of wood from Holland and local textile industry increased the prosperity of the area.
In 1790, Sarreguemines was the capital city of one of the nine
districts forming the new department of Moselle. In 1800,
Sarreguemines was the sous-prefecture of the fourth arrondissement
(replacing the district) of Moselle.
In 1815, the treaty of Vienna placed Sarreguemines on the border with
Prussia. Industrialization started in 1830 with the set up of dynastic
capitalism. Factories were established on the right bank of the Saar,
producing pottery, snuffboxes, cudly toys, safety matches, steam
engines and safes. In 1863-1866, the building of the Collieries' Canal
(Canal des Houillères) and of the railway speeded up the development
of Sarreguemines; the city had only 6,000 inhabitants in 1850 but
14,000 en 1900. It was then the second most important city in Moselle
after Metz.
From 1871 to 1918, Sarreguemines was incorporated to the German Empire
as a part of the Alsace-Moselle region. It became a garrison town, with
the building of two big barracks for cavalry and infantry. A new court
of justice, railway station and hospital were the base of the complete
redesign of the city.
In 1918, Sarreguemines was reincorporated to France and took benefit of
the neigbouring coal-mining basin. However, the city was located close
to the border with Germany and was included in the "red zone" of the
Maginot defense plan in 1930. The increasing threat of war with Germany
completely stopped the economical development of the city.
The inhabitants of Sarregumines were all evacuated to Charente
(southwest of France) on 1 September 1939. In the neighbouring village
of Frauenberg, the writer Roland Dorgelès (1885-1973) coined the
expression la drôle de guerre (the Phoney War), used to designate the
period between the declaration of war and the German assault of June
1940. After the defeat of France, Sarreguemines, severely damaged by
several bombings, was incorporated into the Third Reich.
Sarreguemines was liberated by the American forces in December 1944.
The city was quickly rebuilt around the remains of its historical
center in 1945-1955. A new industrial zone was inaugurated in May 1961
with the opening of the Continental tyre factory, and new
industries replaced the traditional textile and pottery activities
deemed obsolete. The municipality of Sarreguemines absorbed the
neighbouring rural municipalities of Neunkirch and Welferding (1964)
and Folpersviller (1971). The urban district of Sarreguemines was
created in 1972 and was succeeded in 2002 by the urban community of
Sarreguemines-Confluences (52,670 inhabitants).
Sarreguemines is renowned for pottery. The first, pre-industrial
earthenware factory was founded in 1790 by the brothers Nicolas-Henri
and Paul-Augustin Jacobi and their associate Joseph Fabry. Production
became industrial in the 1830s under the leadership of Paul
Utzschneider and Paul de Geiger. There were 3,000 workers in the
factory in the beginning of the XXth century. The Geiger family kept
the control of the factory until the end of the XXth century; in 1979,
the factory was purchased by the Lunéville-Saint-Clément group, also
owner of the historical factory of Lunéville, and production was mostly redirected towards tiles. The factory was renamed
Sarreguemines-Bâtiment in 1982.
The former house of the director of the factory was transformed
into the Earthenware Museum; it includes the wonderful Winter Garten
built for Paul de Geiger in 1882. Another museum, housed by the Blies
watermill, shows the traditional techniques and tools used in
Sarreguemines for earthenware production. One of the 30 original ovens,
made of brick and with a conical chimney, can still be seen behind the
city hall. The casino built in 1890 has been transformed into a
restaurant.
Geiger's social capitalism is recalled every year in June on St. Paul's
Day. A street festival recalls that Paul de Geiger offered a lunch to
his factory workers on his patron saint's day.
The Carnival of Sarreguemines takes place every year in the two weeks
before Mardi Gras. Its traditional elements are the Kappensitzung,
the cavalcade and the masked ball Balla balla. It ends on Ash
Wednesday with the sentencing of Prince Carnival.
Sarreguemines hosts every year the Mir Redde Platt festival,
dedicated to the Frankish (Platt) language still spoken in the region
and in the neighbouring Luxembourg.
Source: Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 6 February 2005
The municipal flag of Sarreguemines is proudly waved on the front page of the municipal website of the city, and was confirmed to be a real flag by the municipal administration. It is a banner of the municipal arms.
The municipal arms of Sarreguemines are:
Parti: au premier d'or à la croix patriarcale de gueules, au second du même à l'alerion d'argent. (GASO)
Parti d'or à la croix de Lorraine de gueule et de gueules à l'alerion d'argent. (Brian Timms)
That is:
Per pale or a cross double traversed gules and gules an alerion argent.
(Brian Timms)
Both GASO and Timms say that these arms, showing the two main symbols
of Lorraine, were used for the first time in 1610. Then, Timms claims
in a fairly obscure manner that Sarreguemines used the "simple" arms of
Lorraine.
In 1913, the municipality was allowed by German Emperor William II to
readopt its original arms. In 1941, the Germans attempted, to no avail,
to suppress the Cross of Lorraine, which had been adopted by General
de Gaulle as the symbol of the Free France.
On the flag, the cross is shadowed and the alerion is outlined in black.
Ivan Sache, 6 February 2005