Aubin, Aveyron
Aubin is a commune in the Aveyron department in the Occitanie of southern France.
The inhabitants of the commune are known as Aubinois.
Geography
Aubin is located some 20 km south-east of Figeac and immediately south of Decazeville. Access to the commune is by road D 5 from Viviez in the north-west which passes through the centre of the commune and the town and continues south to Montbazens. The D221 goes from the town north to Decazeville. The D 11 goes east from the town to Cransac. The minor D 513 road branches off the D 5 on the north-western border of the commune and goes east through the north of the commune to Firmi. The Capdenac-Gare to Rodez railway line passes through the commune and there is a station at the town. Apart from the town there are the hamlets and villages of Severac, Ruffies, Cerons, La Croix du Broual, Combes, Tramons, Ruau, Les Escabrins, and Saugiere. The commune is mixed forest and farmland with significant sized urban areas.The Riou Morte flows through the north-eastern corner of the commune as it flows north-west before turning west at Decazeville. The Enne river flows through the commune and the town from the east and continues north-west to join the Riou Morte at Viviez. The Ruisseau du Banel flows from the east north of the village and joins the Enne on the north-western border of the commune.
Neighbouring communes and villages
History
Classical Antiquity
Lucien Mazars, an author of numerous books on local history, wrote in Aubin; its history, from its origins to the Revolution of 1789: "tradition that Aubin, which bore the name Albin until the end of the 18th century, was founded by the Roman General Declus Clodius Albinus or in his honour". However, General Albinus did not exercise the functions of a legate in Gaul but rather in Roman Britain. His control of Gaul was probably too short to be able to found a town.Middle Ages
Fort Aubin initially served as a fortress and then was occupied during the Middle Ages by the Lords of Rouergue. The town became the center of important coal mines, and also had iron mines.Contemporary era
The commune was the capital of the District of Aubin from 1790 to 1800.In October 1869 soldiers fired on a demonstration of miners killing 14 and injuring 20. This was the second strike in the Second Empire after the one in June 1869 at La Ricamarie. Captain Bernard Gosseran who gave the order to fire on strikers was later made a chevalier of the Legion of Honour. This tragedy inspired the Ode à la Misère and the Aubin poems to Victor Hugo.
Aubin railway station on the Capdenac-Gare to Rodez line opened in 1858.
Heraldry
Administration
List of Successive MayorsFrom | To | Name | Party | Position |
1790 | 1791 | Jacques Rouch Labraguiere | ||
1791 | 1792 | Antoine de Lalande | ||
1792 | 1794 | Joseph Domergue | ||
1794 | 1794 | Joseph Alary | ||
1794 | 1795 | Joseph Domergue | ||
1795 | 1796 | Dominique Lalande | ||
1796 | 1796 | Jean-Jacques Descrozaille | ||
1796 | 1799 | Jean-Baptiste Bessiere | ||
1799 | 1800 | Dominique Lalande | ||
1800 | 1813 | Jean-Jacques Descrozaille | ||
1813 | 1844 | Brassat Saint-Parthem | ||
1844 | 1848 | Eugène Alary | ||
1848 | 1870 | Auguste Maruejouls | ||
1870 | 1871 | Adolphe Segala | ||
1871 | 1872 | Auguste Maruejouls | ||
1872 | 1881 | Charles Coince | ||
1881 | 1894 | Henri Descrozaille | ||
1894 | 1900 | Jean Barbau | ||
1900 | 1904 | Henri Descrozaille | ||
1904 | 1924 | Jules Cabrol | ||
1924 | 1935 | Albert Maurs | ||
1935 | 1939 | Edmond Ginestet |
;Mayors from 1939
From | To | Name | Party | Position |
1939 | 1944 | Prosper Vergnes | ||
1944 | 1944 | Jean Nicot | ||
1944 | 1963 | Edmond Ginestet | ||
1963 | 1965 | Jean Martin | ||
1965 | 1971 | René Gres | ||
1971 | 1989 | Lucien Mazars | ||
1989 | 1995 | Robert Debuchy | ||
1995 | 2008 | Pierre Beffre | PS | |
2008 | 2020 | André Martinez |
Demography
In 2010 the commune had 4,044 inhabitants. The evolution of the number of inhabitants is known from the population censuses conducted in the commune since 1793. From the 21st century, a census of communes with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants is held every five years, unlike larger towns that have a sample survey every year.Culture and heritage
Civil heritage
The commune has two buildings and structures that are registered as historical monuments:- 2 Factory Chimneys
- The Jules Ferry du Gua School. Designed by Emmanuel Brune and built between 1876 and 1880. It is 59 metres long and 12 metres wide built on a terrace overlooking the small houses which make up the suburb of Gua.
- The Town Hall contains several items that are registered as historical objects:
- *A Statue: Maid of Honour at the Court of Francis I
- *A Painting with frame: Miners of the Saar
- *A Painting with frame: Unnamed abstract
- *A Painting with frame: Confidences
- The Departmental House of Memory: Museum of resistance, deportation, and citizenship
- The Museum of Mines
Religious heritage
- The Church of Notre-Dame-des-Mines. The Church also contains many items that are registered as historical objects:
- *A set of monumental paintings: Resurrection and Appearance of Christ, Ascension of Christ, Crowning of the Virgin
- *A painting: Wayside Cross
- *A set of monumental paintings: Virgin and Child, Calvary and episodes of life of miners, Saint Famille
- *A set of monumental paintings and Wayside Cross: Cycle of the Passion of Christ, Episodes of life of miners
- The Church of Saint-Blaise. The Church also contains many items that are registered as historical objects:
- *A Statue: Virgin and Child
- *A Group Sculpture: The Resurrection
- *A Statue: Christ on the Cross
- *A Group Sculpture: The Baptism of Christ
- *A Baptismal font
- *A Consecration Cross
- *An Altar
- The Church of Gua
Facilities
Sports
- The Étoile Sportive de Combes, a football club since 1921.
Notable people linked to the commune
- François Cogné, sculptor.
- Marie-Claire Bancquart, university professor, writer and poet, born in Aubin in 1932.
- Serge Mesonès, French footballer, born in 1948, died in 2001 at Aubin.
- Lilian Bathelot, novelist, author, born at Aubin in 1959.