Agen is a town and commune located in the Aquitaine région in southern France, on the river Garonne, 84 miles above Bordeaux. It is the préfecture of the Lot-et-Garonne département.
Sights
The
12th century cathedral of Agen, St. Caprais, is one of the barest handful of large churches in France with a double
nave; the curious and impractical plan may be a regional trait, since one of the others is the Church of the Jacobins in relatively nearby
Toulouse.
Transportation
Agen is connected by the A62
motorway to both
Toulouse and
Bordeaux.
By train it is around an hour from Toulouse, and around an hour from Bordeaux.
It has a very small airport mostly used for business flights and leisure flying.
Ecclesiastical history
The diocese comprises the
Département of Lot and Garonne. It has been successively
suffragan to the archdioceses of
Bordeaux (under the old regime),
Toulouse (1802-22), and Bordeaux again (since 1822).
Legends which do not antedate the ninth century concerning the hermit,
St. Caprasius, martyred with St. Fides by Dacianus, Prefect of the Gauls, during the persecution of Diocletian, and the story of Vincentius, a Christian martyr (written about 520), furnish no foundation for later traditions which make these two saints early bishops of Agen.
The first bishop of Agen known to history is
St. Phoebadius, friend of
St. Hilary, who published (in 357) a treatise against the
Arians and figured prominently at the
Council of Rimini in 359.
Among the bishops of Agen were Wilhelmus II, sent by
Pope Urban IV (1261-64) to
King St. Louis in 1262 to ask his aid in favor of the
Latin Empire of Constantinople; Bertrand de Goth, whose uncle of the same name was raised from the
Archbishopric of Bordeaux to the
Papal See under the name of
Clement V (1305-14), and during his pontificate visited the city of Agen; Cardinal Jean de Lorraine (1538- 50); the
Oratorian Jules Mascaron, a celebrated preacher, transferred from the
see of Tulle, to that of Agen (1679-1703); Hebert, who was
curé of
Versailles, had contributed to the withdrawal of
Madame de Montespan from the royal court, and who when appointed Bishop of Agen (1703) had as
vicar-general until 1709 the celebrated Belsunce; de Bonnac (1767-1801), who in the parliamentary session of 3 January, 1792, was the first to refuse to sign the constitutional oath. The church of St. Caprasius, a splendid specimen of Romance architecture, dating from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, has been made the cathedral in place of the church of St. Etienne, which was unfortunately destroyed during the Revolution.
The diocese of Agen comprised (end of 1905) 278,740 inhabitants, 47 first class parishes, 397 second class parishes, and 27 vicariates, formerly with State subventions.
Miscellaneous
In France, it is famous as the "capital of the
prune". This is a local produce, which you can most notably buy either as a sweet (prunes stuffed with prune purée) or as an after-dinner delight (prunes soaked in
Armagnac - a type of brandy).
Births
Agen was the birthplace of:
- Bernard Palissy (c. 1510-1590), potter - according to some accounts, he may have been born in Saintes
- Joseph Justus Scaliger (1540-1609), scholar
- Pierre Dupuy (1582-1651), scholar
- Godefroi, Comte d'Estrades (1607-1686), diplomatist and marshal
- Bernard Germain Étienne comte de La Ville-sur-Illon La Cépède (1756-1825), naturalist
- Jean Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent (1780-1846), naturalist
- Jacques Jasmin (1798-1864), Provençal poet
- Joseph Chaumié (1849-1919), politician
- Michel Serres (born 1930), philosopher and author
- Jacques Sadoul (born 1934), author
- Jean Cruguet (born 1939), jockey who won the U.S. Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing.
- Francis Cabrel (born 1953), singer-songwriter and guitarist
- Bernard Campan (born 1958), actor and film director
Twin towns
Agen is twinned with:
See also
Sources and external links
Communes of Lot-et-Garonne | Préfectures
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