Executive summary by Darmansjah
Crillon-le-Brave is a commune in the Vaucluse
department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in southeastern France.
Like many of the older villages in the region, it was built
on a hilltop for defensive purposes, and to provide more farmland on the plains
below. It is a very small town, with only one paved road running through the
middle. It contains little more than a café, a hotel, a restaurant, a church,
and a school.
The origins of the village date back to Roman times, when it
went by the name Crillonium, and later Crillon, but one could say that its
modern history begins in the 14th century when a leading Avignon family
acquired the feudal rights to the village. A long line of dukes ruled Crillon
throughout the period leading up to the French Revolution.
The village takes its full name of Crillon-le-Brave from the
most legendary of its dukes: Louis des Balbes de Berton de Crillon or "Le
Brave Crillon" (1541–1615) was one of Henri IV's fiercest and most valiant
generals during the French Wars of Religion in the late 16th century. The same
Crillon family also gave its name to the famous Hôtel de Crillon in Paris.
Like most of the buildings surrounding the church at the top
of the village, the houses that form the core of the Hostellerie have their
origins in the 16th and 17th centuries and played an important part in village
life.
The Maison Roche was originally the presbytère - the priest's home, and
at the same time the village school.
At the end of the 19th century Crillon-le-Brave was a
prosperous village of 800 inhabitants served by several cafés, bars and stores.
There was even a local philharmonic society. By the beginning of the 20th
century, however, the village began a long slow decline. Two wars and a failing
water supply left the village almost abandoned and many of its houses fell into
ruins. But since the early 1970s new inhabitants have brought new life to the
old stones, so that today Crillon-le-Brave has once again become a lively
village.
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