- Glay, Doubs
French commune
nomcommune=Glay
x=220
y=115
lat_long=coord|47|24|23|N|6|53|28|E|region:FR_type:city
région=Franche-Comté
département=Doubs
arrondissement=Montbéliard
canton=Hérimoncourt
insee=25274
cp=25310
maire=Michel Raymond
mandat=2001-2008
intercomm=Balcons du Lomont
hectares=649
km²=6.49
sans=314
date-sans=1999
dens=48
alt moy=401 m
alt mini=385
alt maxi=566 m
date-dens=1999Glay is a commune in the
Doubs department in easternFrance . It is located in theJura mountains near the border withSwitzerland .History
The area around Glay was part of
Burgundy as early as888 , and came under the control of theHoly Roman Empire in1034 .The village is first historically reported in the 12th century as a centre for
glass making , and the name "Glay" comes from the French word for "glass". Control of the area changed hands many times in the following centuries as the many smallfeudal regions constantly competed with each other for land, taxes and prominence. During the period 1200-1700 Glay was alternately ruled by cities and states that are now part of modern France (Montbéliard ),Germany (Württemberg ) andSwitzerland (Neuchâtel ).In
1259 Marguerite of Montbeliard , daughter ofThierry III of Montbéliard (1205-1283) married the Grand Duke of Neuchâtel. Included as part of herdowry were the seigniories ofBlamont (including Glay),Châtelot , Belmont andCuisance . Blamont was placed by the Lords of Neuchâtel under the protection of the counts and dukes of Burgundy to protect it from being taken back by Montbéliard once control had passed to later generations.In his will Thierry III passed control of Montbéliard itself to the Countess Guillemette, his granddaughter. Since she had married a lord of Burgundy, the entirety of Montbéliard now came under the control of Burgundy, which outraged the other descendants of Thierry III, who had hoped to rule the area themselves. In order to avoid a war of succession,
Renaud of Burgundy made some concessions. In the spring of1283 he ceded toThiébaud IV , Lord of Neuchâtel, the seigniories of Blamont (including Glay) and Châtelot, and guaranteed their status as being held by Neuchâtel.At least twice in the century that followed Glay sought to free itself from the control of Neuchâtel by force of arms. Each effort was defeated.
In
1340 Thiébaud VI of Neuchâtel received the villages of Glay,Hérimoncourt ,Pierrefontaine ,Seloncourt andVillars-lez-Blamont as part of the dowry brought by his wife upon their marriage.In
1383 Glay was part of the dowry (with many other local towns) of the wife ofThiébaud VIII of Neuchâtel. In the centuries that followed it was part of the ever-changing alliances, rivalries and wars between Montbéliard, the Duke of Burgundy, the Kingdom of France, theSwiss Confederation andBasel .In
1439 mercenaries who were not paid after theTreaty of Arras (1435) ended the war between KingCharles VII of France andPhilip, Duke of Burgundy plundered the area.In August
1474 during theBurgundian Wars , following the devastation ofAlsace byCharles the Bold , the area was again heavily damaged in the fighting. After Charles' death at the hands of the Swiss in theBattle of Nancy in 1477, the area around Glay came under the control of the the Bishop of Basel, Jean de Venningen. The church returned the area to Neuchâtel in1478 .By the early
1500s the power of the Lords of Neuchâtel was on the decline afterThiébaud IX failed to produce a male heir. After a struggle over succession marked by wars and lawsuits, on May 4,1506 Duke Ulrich of Württemberg, who had also taken control of Montbéliard and held the title of Count of Montbéliard, bought all of Blamont, including Glay.Because the German Dukes of Württemberg were
Protestant , the area around Glay has since this time beenProtestant , despite the fact that France overall is predominantlyCatholic .During the
Thirty Years War the area around Glay suffered tremendously. In1635 alone the region was invaded by troops from both warring alliances and suffered from the plague and famine.After a period under the control of
Spain , the region around Glay was occupied by the French in1668 but handed back under theTreaty of Aix-la-Chapelle . France again conquered the area in1674 , and it was finally ceded to France at theTreaty of Nijmegen in1678 . Control from the King in Paris brought heavy taxation that devastated the local economy.In
1790 , after the French revolution, the Department of Doubs was created, which includes the area around Glay.When
Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo in1815 , border skirmishes broke out between French troops and those from various subdivisions of Switzerland as the latter tried to take advantage of the chaos in Paris. Although Glay remained within the areas controlled by France adjacent to the Swiss border, the area suffered still further damage.In
World War II Glay was liberated by French forces in September,1944 , although some fighting continued in the region through November.Centre de Glay
In recent years the town had benefitted from the presence of the Centre de Glay, which was most recently a convention centre with a 120-room hotel designed to draw more visiors to the area. The facility was founded in
1823 by the Swiss ministerFather Jacquet to provide vocational training to disadvantaged Protestant children from the area. It later sheltered a private college, and was converted to a conference centre in1953 . The Centre closed in September,2004 for budgetary reasons, and because the older buildings did not meet currentEuropean Union building codes . The closing was lamented as a loss to the Protestant communities of the area.Demographics
The estimate for 2004 was 306.
ee also
*
Communes of the Doubs department References
* [http://www.insee.fr/en/home/home_page.asp INSEE] en icon
* [http://www.ign.fr/rubrique.asp?rbr_id=1&lng_id=EN IGN] en icon
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