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Nompatelize | |
|---|---|
Overview from thePetit Jumeau. | |
![]() Location of Nompatelize | |
| Coordinates:48°19′33″N6°51′13″E / 48.3258°N 6.8536°E /48.3258; 6.8536 | |
| Country | France |
| Region | Grand Est |
| Department | Vosges |
| Arrondissement | Saint-Dié-des-Vosges |
| Canton | Raon-l'Étape |
| Intercommunality | CA Saint-Dié-des-Vosges |
| Government | |
| • Mayor(2020–2026) | Annie Gerardin[1] |
Area 1 | 6.91 km2 (2.67 sq mi) |
| Population (2023)[2] | 547 |
| • Density | 79.2/km2 (205/sq mi) |
| Time zone | UTC+01:00 (CET) |
| • Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00 (CEST) |
| INSEE/Postal code | 88328 /88470 |
| Elevation | 301–520 m (988–1,706 ft) (avg. 372 m or 1,220 ft) |
| 1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | |
Nompatelize (French pronunciation:[nɔ̃patliz]ⓘ) is acommune in theVosgesdepartment inGrand Est in northeasternFrance.
Inhabitants from well-established local families are known ashauts-banais orhautes-banaises, according to gender. This is a reference to the hilly territory in which the village is located and which at one time was owned by the nearbyÉtival Abbey. "Ban" is an old word for a territory while "haut" (high) is a reference to the uneven topography.
The commune occupies an ancient volcanic plateau which has been coated at the edges withPermiansandstone deposits which become thicker to the south and east in the Permian basin ofSaint-Dié.
The commanding position of the little plateau, between the valleys of theMeurthe and of theValdange provides remarkable views towardsRaon-l'Étape andSaint-Dié-des-Vosges respectively to the north and to the east, accessible to motorists travelling along the departmental road RD32 which connects Saint-Dié with theHaut du Bois Pass and the road toRambervillers.
A principal source of employment is a car parts plant owned by theFaurecia company.
The commune occupies a plateau of volcanic rocks covered at its edges by Permian sandstone deposits, which become very thick to the south and east in the Saint-DiéPermian basin. The center of Nompatelize sits atop a vent of the Permianvolcano, once in a torrid environment spewing siliceous lava that was already highly petrified. This ignimbriterhyolite, brought from deep magma chambers through narrow upwelling channels, accumulated in the southern vicinity of a thin band of UpperOrdovicianschists and diorites that underwent significant compression and intensemetamorphism beneath themountain range formed during theCarboniferous period. The village is located west of Brehimont, a hamlet ofSaint-Michel-sur-Meurthe situated on another volcanic cone.

The plateau's commanding position between theMeurthe andValdange valleys, now traversed by the road between Saint-Dié and theCol du Haut du Bois pass, offers remarkable views to the north, particularly towardsRaon-l'Étape, and also to the east towardsSaint-Dié-des-Vosges.
The highest point within the commune's territory is the lower of the two small sandstone massifs known as the Twins, which extend the northern part of the vast Madeleine massif, continuing south beyond theCol du Haut Jacques pass. This region was formerly called Agne. The commune of Nompatelize, whose original community, patron of the Haut-Ban, long used and maintained an old timber-logging road from the sandstone mountains of the South, extends north ofSaint-Michel-sur-Meurthe through the hamlet ofBiarville, reaching theMeurthe at the place calledBourmont, an old port on the Meurthe whose altitude is only 301 meters.
Nompatelize is located in zone 3 of moderate seismicity.
The commune is located in theRhine watershed within theRhine-Meuse basin. It is drained by the Meurthe River, the Valdange stream, the Biarville stream, and the Maubret stream.
The Meurthe River, with a total length of 160.6 km, rises in the commune ofLe Valtin and flows into theMoselle River atPompey, after passing through 53 communes.
The Valdange River, with a total length of 14.8 km, rises in the municipality of La Bourgonce and flows into the Meurthe River at Étival-Clairefontaine, after passing through five communes.

The quality of bathing waters and watercourses can be consulted on a dedicated website managed by the water agencies and the French Agency for Biodiversity.
As of January 1, 2024, Nompatelize is categorized as a rural commune with dispersed housing, according to the new seven-level municipal population density scale defined by INSEE in 2022. It belongs to the urban area of Saint-Dié-des-Vosges, an intra-departmental agglomeration comprising 16 communes, of which it is a suburban commune. Furthermore, the commune is part of the Saint-Dié-des-Vosges catchment area, of which it is a peripheral commune. This area, which includes 47 communes, is categorized as having a population between 50,000 and 200,000.

Attested in the formNorpardi ecclesiae in 1140.

Nompatelize appears to have been a villa or large estate, an old center of economic power situated in the middle of a cultivated plateau well before the 11th century. The region was already populated and administered during the Late Roman Empire. Long before the establishment of the Étival district in the 7th century or the religious donation of Saint Richarde to the chapter of Étival, it was dotted with modest hamlets, some of which still exist and others that have disappeared. Recent work in the Strasbourg archives has uncovered traces of Norpardi cellae or Norpard ecclesia in the 9th century. These local history studies lead to a modeling of the early autonomous territory of Nompatelize as a large estate. The hamlets would have been free or serf farmsteads, and the Feignes, derived from the term "fines," designating the ends—that is, the lands at the edges of the agricultural territory—would thus have been at the limits of the vast forest estate of Agne, which after the 12th century became the woods of Mortagne to the south and La Madeleine to the north. Its optimal expansion would have been on the plateau towards La Salle, La Bourgonce, and Bréhimont. This large estate and its grange were incorporated into the chapter of Étival, as established by Empress Richardis's charter in 886.
The Premonstratensian canons regular, summoned by the canonesses of Andlau, settled in the territory of Étival, expelling the former canons from Autrey in 1146. The Premonstratensian monks, dependent on Flabémont, under the leadership of Gilbert, assumed their apostolic mission after 1147, notably celebrating Mass and attracting skilled craftsmen and numerous lay brothers. The inhabitants, constantly overseen by the monks under a quasi-military regime, built permanent dwellings of stone, brick, and wood, covered with tile roofs rather than thatch, developed agricultural practices, and laid out stone roads necessary for the planned development of the landscape and the growth of construction and transport by cart and boat. The port of Bourmont allowed logs and planks from the forests of Mortagne to be floated down the Meurthe River.
No longer content with a modest chapel, the canons decided to build a church there in honor of their first founder, the pious Norbert of Xanten. For political reasons, they recognized the old community of men living on this higher part of their territory and seem to have cleverly conflated Norpardi ecclesia and Norberti ecclesia, the assembly of Norbert. It is likely that the apparent homophony between Norpardi and Norberti was conducive to the evangelical work and to the local recognition of the sacred authority of the white canons. Nompatelize was also temporarily recognized as an essential hierophany and a vital center of the abbey's territory.
Grain production increased, and barns multiplied in the 13th century. The techniques and skills of the Premonstratensian monks had already served as a model for the entire mountain region. The exploitation of the Mortagne forests allowed for the export of planks to the port of Bourmont on the Meurthe River. The town, already designated as the chief town of the high district, formerly located along an old road, became a spur of the route connectingRambervillers toColmar.
Therefore, having freed themselves from the control of the canonesses of Andlau, who originally owned two-thirds of the district, by accepting a heavy payment of seigneurial dues in cash, the chapter and the abbot, still dependent on Flabémont, decided to dedicate themselves to the contemplative life recommended by their mother abbey. They secluded themselves in their beautiful abbey at Étival, only to emerge a few decades later, ruined by the lords who had seized a large share of their property and revenues. The impoverished monks then entered a period of religious decline, losing their renown and reputation, first among the common people and then, after excommunication by the chapter, among the powerful and those responsible for civil authority.
A recovery was undertaken by the abbot. The canons borrowed from the collegiate church of Saint-Dié, from the merchants of Bruyères, Rambervillers, and Raon-l'Étape, and slowly, step by step, bought back the feudal shares, regained control of the parish of Nompatelize, and restored the chapels in the surrounding area. They regained their seigneurial power and exercised their sovereign justice throughout the 15th century.
In 1478, Brother Didier Moyen, parish priest of Nompatelize, established a foundation in agreement with the Étival convent to preserve the house, chapel, and fountain of Bouilly. This chapel, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, located above Nompatelize, which at the time boasted large farms and agricultural holdings, was central to the concerns of this wealthy canon. He contributed to the chapel's upkeep, particularly its lighting and roof, stipulated that Mass be said there weekly, and, most importantly, that on the feast days of Our Lady, Easter Monday, and New Year's Day, the prior and chapter would travel there, in addition to organizing a pilgrimage carrying the heavy cross on Whit Monday. Abbot Gérard d'Essey opposed what he likely considered a whim, but the chapter nonetheless signed the agreement. From this symbolic moment onward, the community once again held most of the sacred powers over the upper territory of Étival, which also included the communities of Hoste du Bois (La Salle), La Bourgonce, and Saint-Michel. It also maintained its key economic role, with its crop cultivation, livestock farming, and control of timber transport.
The abbey of Étival reached its zenith at the beginning of the 16th century, when the influence of Flabémont waned. The abbey weathered the hardships of the 17th century, while its leadership embraced the reforms ofServais de Lairuelz. The plateau was devastated after 1633, but was quickly repopulated by the end of the century.
By the mid-18th century, the plateau was intensively cultivated and densely populated. The inhabitants of Haut Ban continued to attend the court sessions at Étival until 1747, when the abbey's estate passed into commendam to Bishop Bégon of Toul. Haut Ban appears to have been attached to the provostship of Saint-Dié, and the distinct entity of Étival disappeared definitively with the establishment of the Bishopric of Saint-Dié in 1776. Nompatelize became a commune during the French Revolution. She bought a safe to lock away her archives and suffered the hardships of wartime requisitions.
In 1786, atop the Twins stood a standing stone known throughout the region as the Horse Stone. It was an enormous Druidic table, 8 meters long and 5 meters wide, placed on two very tall pillars. It was destroyed that same year to provide building materials for the church in Nompatelize.
The Nompatelize plateau was a battlefield or site of fighting on three occasions:

Following a moving speech by the mayor of Nompatelize, Bernard Gérardin, recalling the suffering endured during the 1914 occupation and the 22 deaths from the town during the four years of the world conflict, General Jacquot, the government delegate tasked with pinning the Croix de Guerre on the town, read the text from the official gazette on Sunday, August 28, 1921, from the makeshift platform set up by Vosges officials in front of the town hall, which was decorated with greenery, garlands, and flags: "Nompatelize (Vosges) was the scene of fierce fighting in 1914, which severely damaged it. Through the admirable moral conduct of its inhabitants, two of whom were executed during the enemy occupation, it has earned the gratitude of the nation."
Educational institutions:
Healthcare professionals and facilities: