Contrary
to the what most people think there is very little natural about
the garrigue that covers the hills of the Aude and the Languedoc.
It is very much the product of the agricultural development of the
land, the history of this ecology can be traced back over 4500 years
but the last 50-60 years have been the most dramatic. the garrigue
is very much a product of man's over exploitation of the dry Mediterranean
landscape.
4500 years ago the migration from the middle east brought tribes
with horses, barley, sheep, and skills in copper working. The land
they found was a continual forest of white and green oaks. They
clearer spaces for cultivation and used wood and charcoal for their
heating and metal work, the horses gave them access to the highest
forests and the sheep ate the smaller plants under the trees. 2000
years later the Romans arrived and cleared huge spaces for the great
Via Domitienne and there towns (Oppida) and farms, much of which
was later run down by the all conquering Wisigoths. Around 1000
AD the religious orders of Catholic monks cleared much of the coastal
plains and foothills. In this period the population doubled, as
the monks introduced the great mainstays of Languedocean agriculture,
olives, vines and wheat. Indeed the history of most of today's villages
and small towns can be traced back to around the 11th century. The
great forests where clearer, the plains filled with wheat fields,
the hill sides terraced and planted with predominately olives and
a few vines, sheep and goats roamed the remaining wild areas during
the winters and were moved to the Pyrenean pastures during summer.
The French Revolution removed the aristocracy and the remaining
wild hunting areas were cut down by charcoal burners and shepherds.
The agricultural pattern continued through to the 19th century,
when with the improved communications provided by firstly the Canal
du Midi and then by steam power made the commercial exploitation
of vines much more profitable. between Carcassonne and Toulouse
the great wheat fields grew and provided the wealth for Toulouse,
Castelnaudry and Carcassonne. Between 1820 and 1860 the population
doubled on the back of this wheat and wine based wealth.
It was however the 1950s
and 1960s which really formed the garrigue as we now know it.
Five main factors totally transformed the Languedoc:
» In 1953 the first tractors arrived in the Languedoc this
broke the reliance on horse power, a by product was that tractors
could not access the steep slopes of the hills hat previously could
be accessed by foot and horse, thus leaving isolated and inaccessible
uncultivated.
» The replacement of gas with petrol produces removed the
demand for charcoal and went a major way to slow down the high forest
clearing.
» The great frost of 1956 which killed off many of the olives
which covered the hillsides, most were never replanted.
» The common agricultural market which opened competition
from British, Australian and New Zealand lamb and effectively destroyed
the Languedocean sheep industry.
» In 1954 myxomatosis hit the Languedoc, the rabbits that
had been introduced by the Romans and whose abundance and low cost
had made them a mainstay of rural cuisine were wiped out, 99% of
the rabbit population died.
Added to these push factors
was the ever growing demand from a booming French industry, these
were the Golden Years of the great factories. Faced with an ever
harder life in the countryside and profitable work in the cities
and towns the countryside of the Languedoc emptied of people, over
a million hectares of agricultural land fell out of use in France,
huge swathes of it in the Languedoc.
No longer roamed by hungry
sheep and rabbits, cleared by charcoal burners, and cultivated by
small holder farmers the garrigue as we now know it recovered the
empty spaces of the Languedoc hillside.
However with 1,500 new
arrivals every month in the Languedoc, 18,000 a year at present
rates the open spaces face a new threat. Each family of three it
is estimated need around 1500 square metres of land, this includes
not just the house but also the public serves and infrastructure
needed to support them, a 1000 hectares per year are being lost
to development. The great difference however is that people need
water and so tend to concentrate around existing urban centres,
the garrigue on the other hand can survive on very little.
Related Pages
LaClape
History of Carcassonne
History of Lezignan Corbieres
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