Roussillon |
Map of Aude |
Roussillon © William Shen wwshen.com |
After the treaty, the French began a ruthless process of Frenchification, which was successful in Perpignan where the bourgeoisie tended to identify their commercial interest with a central power; the mountain hinterland, however, was left largely untouched until modern times, when the collapse of traditional agriculture, the introduction of compulsory education and the devastation of the vineyards by phylloxera combined to drive the people off the land a process which still continues today, albeit at a slower rate.
Although there's no real separatist impetus among French Catalans today, their sense of identity is still strong: the language is very much alive, and the national colours of yellow and red are much in evidence wherever you go. The Pic du Canigou, which completely dominates Roussillon, seems much larger in presence than its actual 2784m, and it remains a powerful symbol of Catalan nationalism, attracting hordes of Catalans from Barcelona to celebrate the summer solstice. And in the little town of Prades, which, as the place of exile from Franquista Spain of the cellist Pau Casals, became a symbol of Catalan resistance.
Most of the region's attractions are easily reached from the region's one major town, Perpignan. The coast and immediate hinterland above the Spanish frontier is beautiful, though predictably crowded, and the finest spots are in the Tech and Têt valleys which cut back west into the Pyrenees, where you can view the Romanesque monasteries of Serrabonne, St-Michel-de-Cuxa and St-Martin-du-Canigou, Vauban's fortress town of Villefranche-de-Conflent, the museum at Céret with its unique series of Picasso ceramics and Mont Canigou itself and its foothill orchards of peaches and cherries.
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