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Bitche

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Bitche
Country
     France
Région Lorraine
Départment Moselle
Arrondissement Sarreguemines
Canton Bitche (chief town)
INSEE 57089
Postal Code 57230
Mayor
Current Term
Edmond Stenger
2001-2008
Intercommunality Communauté de communes
de Bitche et environs
Longitude 07° 25' 33" E
Latitude 49° 03' 09" N
Altitudes average : 290 m
minimum : 249 m
maximum : 432 m
Area 41.13 km²
Population without double-counting 5,752 inhab.
(1999)
Population Density 139 inhab./km²
The citadel of Bitche
Enlarge
The citadel of Bitche

The citadel above the town
Enlarge
The citadel above the town

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Bitche (German: Bitsch) is a town and commune of the Moselle département, in Lorraine, in northeastern France.

It is known for its large citadel. The surrounding woods are known as the Bitscher Land.

Geography

Bitche is located on the Orne, at the foot of the northern slope of the Vosges between Haguenau and Sarreguemines, about 30 km south of Landstuhl, Germany.

Sites and History

There are a Roman Catholic and a Protestant church, a classical school and an academy of forestry. The town of Bitche, which was formed of the villages of Rohr and Kaltenhausen in the 17th century, derives its name from the old stronghold (mentioned in 1172 as Bytis Castrum) standing on a rock some 80 m. above the town. This had long given its name to the countship of Bitsch, which was originally in the possession of the dukes of Lorraine. In 1297 it passed by marriage to Eberhard I of Zweibrücken, whose line became extinct in 1569, when the countship reverted to Lorraine. It passed with that duchy to France in 1766.

After that date the town rapidly increased in population. The citadel, which had been constructed by Vauban on the site of the old castle after the capture of Bitche by the French in 1624, had been destroyed when it was restored to Lorraine in 1698. This was restored and strengthened in 1740 into a fortress that proved impregnable in all succeeding wars. The attack upon it by the Prussians in 1793 was repulsed; in 1815 they had to be content with blockading it; and in 1870, though it was closely invested by the Germans after the battle of Worth, it held out until the end of the war. A large part of the fortification is excavated in the red sandstone rock, and was rendered bomb-proof; a supply of water was secured to the garrison by a deep well in the interior.

The town is near the Maginot Line, into which the citadel was integrated.

Miscellaneous

Bitche is twinned since 1979 with Lebach, Saarland, Germany.

In March 1945 the U. S. 100th Infantry Division broke through the Maginot Line in the Bitche area and liberated the town, which had been occupied by German troops.

The town of Bitche was mentioned in BBC comedy panel game QI, in episode 8 of season 2. Bill Bailey commented on the comical nature of seeing a sign "You are now leaving Bitche".

External links

 


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