- Le Bugue
French commune
nomcommune=Le Bugue
région=Aquitaine
département=Dordogne
arrondissement=Sarlat-la-Canéda
canton=Le Bugue
insee=24067
cp=24260
maire=Gérard Fayolle
mandat=2001-2008
intercomm=Terre de Cro-Magnon
longitude=0.92805
latitude=44.92083
alt moy=60 m
alt mini=48
alt maxi=245 m
hectares=2896
km²=28.96
sans=2778
date-sans=1999
dens=95
date-dens=1999Le Bugue (in
occitan "Albuga") is a commune in theDordogne department in southwesternFrance .Geography
Le Bugue is located on the banks of the
Vézère River a few kilometers before the confluence of the Vézère with theDordogne River atLimeuil . Le Bugue is also on two national routes (Route Nationale 703 and Route Nationale 710).History
Le Bugue has been inhabited since prehistoric times. In 964 a
Benedictine monastery was founded in Le Bugue under the name of Saint Marcel and Saint Salvador.The monastery had disappeared by the late 19th century.Le Bugue enjoyed a period of prosperity until 1154, when the province of
Périgord came under English control. Le Bugue was often disputed between British troops and those of the King of France, and therefore suffered greatly.One of the most important dates in the history of Le Bugue is November 1319, when the King of France, Philippe Le Long, ordered by deed that the market be perpetually held on Tuesday. This act is still presently in force.
Le Bugue was a quiet commercial town until the
French Revolution . However, it endured some fratricidal struggles between the lords of Limeuil and Fleurac.The end of the 19th century was marked by the construction of the local bridge and the arrival of the railroad (the line between
Périgueux andAgen ).Le Bugue owes part of its fame to the chemist and physician Jean Rey who discovered the
Law of Conservation of Mass 200 years before Lavoisier. Jean Rey also invented the "Thermoscope", the forerunner of the modern thermometer.ee also
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Communes of the Dordogne department References
"Based on the article in the French Wikipedia."
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