'Perpignan' (
French: ''Perpignan'',
pronounced ;
Catalan ''Perpinyà'',
pronounced ) is a
commune and the ''
préfecture'' (administrative capital city) of the
Pyrénées-Orientales''
département'' in southern
France. Perpignan was the capital of the
former province and
county of
Roussillon (Rosselló in Catalan).
Population (2004) : '116,700' (''Perpignanais'') in the city proper. The
metropolitan area had a total population of 249,016 in 1999 and more than '300,000 inhabitants' today.
History
Though settlement in the area goes back to
Roman times, the medieval town of Perpignan seems to have been founded around the beginning of the 10th century (first mentioned in a document as ''villa Perpiniarum'' in
927). Soon Perpignan became the capital of the counts of
Roussillon. In
1172 Count
Girard II bequeathed his lands to the
Counts of Barcelona. Perpignan acquired the institutions of a partly self-governing
commune in
1197. French
feudal rights over Roussillon were given up by
Louis IX in the
Treaty of Corbeil (1258).
When
James I, the Conqueror,
king of Aragon and
count of Barcelona, erected the
Kingdom of Majorca in
1276, Perpignan became the capital of the mainland territories of the new state. The succeeding decades are considered the golden age in the history of the city. It prospered as a centre of cloth manufacture, leather work, goldsmiths' work, and other luxury crafts. King
Philip III of France died there in
1285, as he was returning from his unsuccessful
crusade against the
Aragonese Crown.
In
1344 Peter IV of Aragon annexed the Kingdom of Majorca and Perpignan once more became part of the County of Barcelona. A few years later it lost approximatively half of its population owing to the
Black Death. It was attacked and occupied by
Louis XI of France in
1463; a violent uprising against French rule in
1473 was harshly put down after a long siege, but in
1493 Charles VIII of France, wishing to conciliate
Spain in order to free himself to invade
Italy, restored it to
Ferdinand II of Aragon.
Again besieged and captured by the French during the
Thirty Years' War in September
1642, Perpignan was formally ceded by
Spain 17 years later in the
Treaty of the Pyrenees, and began then to form part of the Kingdom of France.
Main sights
The
cathedral of St. John the Baptist was begun in
1324 and finished in
1509.
[1]
The 13th century castle of the
kings of Majorca sits on the high citadel, surrounded by ramparts, reinforced for
Louis XI and
Charles V, which were updated in the 17th century by
Louis XIV's military engineer
Vauban.
The walls surrounding the town, which had been designed by Vauban, were razed in 1904 to accommodate urban development.
Economy
Traditional commerce was in
wine and
olive oil, corks (the
cork oak ''Quercus suber'' grows in Perpignan's mild climate), wool and leather, and iron. In May
1907 it was a seat of agitation by southern producers for government enforcement of
wine quality following a collapse in prices.
Sport
Perpignan is a rugby stronghold: their
rugby union side,
USA Perpignan, is a regular competitor in the
Heineken Cup, and their
rugby league side plays in the
Super League under the name
Catalans Dragons.
Miscellaneous
Perpignan has a close connection with the sculptor
Aristide Maillol, who attended school there.
Following a visit in
1963, the Catalan
surrealist artist
Salvador Dalí declared the city's
railway station the centre of the
Universe, saying that he always got his best ideas sitting in the waiting room. He followed that up some years later by declaring that the Iberian Peninsula rotated precisely at Perpignan station 132 million years ago - an event the artist invoked in his 1983 painting ''Topological Abduction of Europe - Homage to
Rene Thom''.
[2] Above the station is a monument in Dali's honour, and across the surface of one of the main platforms is painted, in big letters, «
perpignan centre du monde » (French for "
perpignan centre of the world").
[3]
Notable people born in Perpignan
★
Louise Labé (
1524 -
1566), a female Lyon poet of the
Renaissance which at the siege of Perpignan, or in a tournament there, is said to have dressed in male clothing and fought on horseback in the ranks of the Dauphin, afterwards Henry II
★
Hyacinthe Rigaud (
1659-
1743), who painted the definitive portraits of Louis XIV
★
François Arago (
1786-
1853), the physicist, astronomer and liberal politician, who secured the abolition of
slavery in the
French colonies in 1853, was born in the nearby village of
Estagel (
Estagell) and is memorialized in the eponymous Place Arago that bears his statue in the centre of the town.
★
Robert Brasillach (
1909-
1945), pro-
Nazi author in
Vichy France and
rugby union supporter who supported the ban on
rugby league.
★
Frédérick Bousquet (born
1981), French freestyle and butterfly swimmer who competed at two consecutive
Summer Olympics (
2000 and
2004)
★
Sandrine Erdely-Sayo (born 1968) pianist - Youngest recipient of the French Minister of Culture Prize at 13 years old. She lives in Philadelphia where she became National Interest for the United States
Sister cities
★ Sister cities:
★
★
Hanover,
Germany, from
1960
★
★
Lancaster,
United Kingdom, from
1962
★
★
Lake Charles,
United States, from
1993
★
★
Sarasota, United States, from
1994 (http://www.sarasotasistercities.org/Perpignan.html)
★
★
Tyre,
Lebanon, from
1997
★ Partner towns:
★
★
Girona,
Spain, from
1988
★
★
Barcelona,
Spain, from
1994
★
★
Figueres,
Spain, from
1996
★
★
Ma'alot-Tarshiha,
Israel, from
1998
★
★
Tavira,
Portugal, from
2001

Perpignan train station
References
1. [1],[2],[3]
2. Elliott King in Dawn Ades (ed.), ''Dalí'', Bompiani Arte, Milan, 2004, p. 448
3. http://railfaneurope.net/pix/fr/electric/emu/TGV/Duplex/misc/pix.html
★ Alícia Marcet, ''Histoire de Perpignan, la fidelíssima'' (1995).
External links
★
City council website
★
Perpignan Tourist Office
★
Perpignan Museums