Browse / France / Occitanie / Saint-Céré
Saint-Céré
Occitanievillage
Saint-Céré
Total population
3,438
Demographic figures from INSEE. Overview below cites Wikipedia and may reference a different year.
City facts
Facts from Wikidata (CC0).
Overview
Saint-Céré is a commune in the Lot department, southern France. The commune includes within its borders the castle of Saint-Laurent-les-Tours, where the artist Jean Lurçat lived and worked for many years, and from which he operated a secret radio for the French Resistance. The castle still houses a collection of his works.
Read more on WikipediaHistory & geography
History
The town's creation originates around the following legend. Spérie, the daughter of Serenus, the lord of the area around Saint-Cere, had dedicated herself to God. Around 760, Spérie was condemned by her brother Clarus and had her head cut off by him after she refused several requests to marry the neighbouring lord Ellidius, whom Clarus was in dispute with, and whom she regarded as a pagan. She stood up, retrieved her head, and went to wash it in a clear spring. A chapel was built to house the location of her tomb, and to accommodate the pilgrims who came in crowds. The chapel became a church in the 11th century. In 1178, the lord of the land around the town, vassals of Auvergne, became the vassals of the Viscount of Turenne until 1738. The Turenne's granted various charters to the town giving it privileges and rights starting in 1292 and again in 1464, 1490, and 1642. The charter of 1464 allowed the town to be run by consuls and the right to build a town wall, gates, and moats. During the Hundred Year's War, the English kings controlled the town in 1259 and 1290 as the Turennes aligned themselves with the former. And from 1369 until 1378, the town was controlled by routiers under Bernard de la Salle. In the French Wars of Religion, it was briefly besieged and occupied by Protestant forces in 1574. By the 1700s, the town roads and squares were enlarged, quays built, and the walls torn down. In 1738, the Viscounty of Turenne, and its towns including Saint Cere, and lands were sold to pay a debt, and bought by and returned to, the control of the king of France. During the French Revolution, the department of the Lot was created in 1790, and the town briefly became one of six district towns and called Cere-la-Montagne.
Geography
The town is located in the centre of a small metropolitan area, in the Quercy, northeast of the Causse de Gramat and west of Segala, between Lacapelle-Marival and Bretenoux, in the valley of the Bave, tributary of the Dordogne river, and on the northern edge of the Limargue. It is the city-centre of the urban unit of Saint-Céré. Located at the crossroad of the routes to Limousin, Auvergne and Quercy, Saint-Céré is a sought after place to stay due to its location and an excellent point of departure for many walks and excursions in the Haut-Quercy. The Bave river, a tributary of the Dordogne, flows through the town. The area of the commune is 1,133 hectares; its altitude varies from 141 to 523 meters. At the town hall, the altitude of Saint-Céré is 155 meters. It rises from 141 meters at Bave river to 523 meters in the southern part of the commune. Saint-Céré has the distinction of being at the junction of the three types of temperate climates: there is a Temperate Oceanic climate, with Mediterranean and Continental influences, characterised by a dry and hot summer, a sunny autumn, a mild winter. In the shelter of the foothills of the Massif Central, the Vent d'Autan is here moderate.
Excerpted from the corresponding Wikipedia article (CC BY-SA).
Geography
Coordinates & boundaries from the US Census TIGER/Line shapefiles.
Climate
10-year averages from ERA5 reanalysis (Open-Meteo).
Air quality
Walkability
Amenities nearby
Wildlife & biodiversity
Most-observed species
- Species 2490719Species 2490719941
- Common ChaffinchFringilla coelebs Linnaeus, 1758 · Aves929
- Great TitParus major Linnaeus, 1758 · Aves889
- European RobinErithacus rubecula (Linnaeus, 1758) · Aves862
- Eurasian Blue TitCyanistes caeruleus (Linnaeus, 1758) · Aves840
- Common Wood-PigeonColumba palumbus Linnaeus, 1758 · Aves761
- Species 2492956Species 2492956674
- Common BuzzardButeo buteo (Linnaeus, 1758) · Aves672
Citizen-science & research observations from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF).
Earthquake history
Most recent
- M 2.7 — 2008-12-054 km NNE of Laguiole, France
- M 2.5 — 2008-11-119 km ESE of Sainte-Geneviève-sur-Argence, France
- M 3 — 2008-11-042 km NE of Chaudes-Aigues, France
- M 2.5 — 2008-09-129 km SSW of Saint-Sauves-d'Auvergne, France
- M 2.6 — 2007-05-25France
- M 2.5 — 2006-08-2110 km SSW of La Bourboule, France
Events from the USGS Earthquake Catalog (global) (FDSN Event Web Service).
Photos
Sights & places nearby
Notable people from here
Nearby places in Occitanie
- Saint-Julien de Piganiol22.8 mi away
- Decazeville27.3 mi away · pop. 5,111
- Firmi30 mi away · pop. 2,348
- Prayssac42.2 mi away · pop. 2,460
- Puy-l'Évêque44.4 mi away · pop. 1,900
- Castan46.1 mi away
- Olemps48.5 mi away · pop. 3,503
- Caussade51.3 mi away · pop. 6,804
- Itzac56.5 mi away · pop. 178
- Frausseilles57.4 mi away · pop. 84
- Donnazac58.4 mi away · pop. 65
- Lescure-d'Albigeois64 mi away · pop. 4,589
Geography & sun
Nearby airports
Public attention
Books about this place
Recent natural events nearby
Ground air-quality sensors
Recently spotted species
Events
Gallery
Official Identifiers
INSEE — French National Institute of Statistics
- INSEE code
- 46251
- Department
- 46
- Region
- 76
- Population (Wikidata)
- 3,429
geo.api.gouv.fr
Sources
- • Wikipedia
- • Open-Meteo (ERA5 reanalysis)
- • Wikidata
- • USGS Earthquake Catalog (global feed)
- • GBIF (Global Biodiversity Information Facility)
- • INSEE — French national statistics, via geo.api.gouv.fr (official commune code, population, surface, department, region)
- • INSEE — French National Institute of Statistics — geo.api.gouv.fr