Saint-Louis France

Saint-Louis is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France. The inhabitants are called Ludoviciens. Following th…
Saint-Louis is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France. The inhabitants are called Ludoviciens. Following the conquest of the Sundgau and other parts of the Alsace by France in the course of the Thirty Years' War and the Peace of Westphalia, the French crown took a growing interest in the control and security of the land west of the Rhine at the Rhine knee below the territory of the Canton of Basel. In 1679, therefore, as part of a deliberation proclamation of his continued expansion policy on the Upper Rhine, Louis XIV ordered the construction of Hüningen Fortress at this strategic point. The occupants of the place, the fishing village of Hüningen, had to leave to make way for this military fortification, the construction of which was carried out by fortress architect, Vauban in 1680. The villagers were rehoused in the newly founded Village-Neuf and on the road from Basle to Paris via Mulhouse, where the first element of the present day village of Saint-Louis was established on the state border. This settlement, consisting of several border guards and taverns was initially part of the municipality of Hüningen's "new village". On 26 November 1684 — around 3 years after the high point of France's policy of annexation or politique des Réunions — the capture of Strasbourg - the town was officially named by Louis XIV. Its patron is not actually the Sun King himself, but his predecessor, the canonized King Louis IX or Saint Louis.
  • Country: France
  • Region: Grand Est
  • Area: 16.85 km² (6.51 sq mi)
  • Elevation: 237–278 m (778–912 ft)
  • Department: Haut-Rhin
  • Arrondissement: Mulhouse
  • Canton: Saint-Louis

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Data from: en.wikipedia.org