Ellimer ( fr. Hellimer ) - a commune in northeastern France , the region of Grand Est [1] (formerly Alsace - Champagne - Ardennes - Lorraine ), Moselle department . Refers to the canton of Grockenken .
| Commune | |||
| Ellimer | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Hellimer | |||
| |||
| A country | |||
| Region | Grand Est | ||
| Department | Moselle | ||
| Canton | Grotenken | ||
| Mayor | Romuald Yayyui (Romuald Yahiaoui) | ||
| History and geography | |||
| Square | 10.42 km² | ||
| Center height | 218-334 m | ||
| Timezone | UTC + 1 , in the summer UTC + 2 | ||
| Population | |||
| Population | 605 people ( 2011 ) | ||
| Density | 58 people / km² | ||
| Digital identifiers | |||
| Postcode | 57660 | ||
| INSEE code | 57311 | ||
Content
Geographical position
House Bonera (1716).
Ellimer is located 330 km east of Paris and 50 km east of Metz .
History
- In the X century belonged to the Abbey of Saint-Martin-de-Glandiere in Longeville-le-Saint-Avold .
- In the XIV century was part of the county Moranzh .
- In 1571, under the contract, the seniorat Ellimer was divided into 4 parts: one quarter was given to the episcopate of Metz, and three quarters to the Duchy of Lorraine. All the settlements of Ellimer were divided, and most of Diffambac and Akerbach were ruled by an episcopate, and most of Ellimer was subordinate to Lorraine.
- During the Thirty Years War (1617-1647), this region of the Moselle suffered especially badly. In particular, there were fights between the Swedish Duke of Weimar and the garrison of Saverne. Constant raids of opponents, frequent changes of power led to the fact that by 1637, 7 of 80 inhabitants remained in Ellimer, 4 out of 45 in Diffamback.
- In 1766, together with Lorraine, it became part of France.
- In 1871, it was occupied by Germany and returned to France after the First World War.
Demographics
According to the 2011 census, 605 people lived in the commune.
Attractions
- The castle of Delimer (1332), destroyed in 1842.
- Bonera House, a traditional Lothing house.
- Church (1740).
- Chapel of St. Margaret (XIV century).
- Chapel of St. Antoine in Ackerback (XVIII century).
Notes
- ↑ Décret n ° 2016-1262 du 28 septembre 2016 portant fixation du région Grand Est (Fr.) . Decree of September 28, 2016 . legifrance.gouv.fr. The date of circulation is January 11, 2017. Archived on October 2, 2016.