place

Saint-Maurice-sur-Moselle

Communes of Vosges (department)Pages including recorded pronunciationsPages with French IPAVosges (department) geography stubs
Saint Maurice sur Moselle
Saint Maurice sur Moselle

Saint-Maurice-sur-Moselle (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃ mɔʁis syʁ mɔzɛl] ; literally "Saint-Maurice on Moselle") is a commune in the Vosges department in Grand Est in northeastern France.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Saint-Maurice-sur-Moselle (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Saint-Maurice-sur-Moselle
Rue de l'Agne, Épinal

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Saint-Maurice-sur-MoselleContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 47.8586 ° E 6.8247 °
placeShow on map

Address

Rue de l'Agne

Rue de l'Agne
88560 Épinal
Grand Est, France
mapOpen on Google Maps

Saint Maurice sur Moselle
Saint Maurice sur Moselle
Share experience

Nearby Places

Bussang Pass
Bussang Pass

The Col de Bussang (Bussang Pass) is one of the busiest passes in France's Vosges mountains. Located in the Grand Est region of France at an altitude of 727 m, it links Lorraine and Alsace via Route Nationale 66 (also European Route 512). The two communes on the Lorraine side of the pass are Bussang, and the Alsace side is Urbès. The ridge crossing at Bussang is one of the main historical passes that have crossed the Vosges since ancient times, alongside the Col du Bonhomme, the Col du Donon, and the Col de Saverne. The importance of vehicular traffic over the Bussang pass has grown steadily since the last centuries of the Middle Ages, with the intensification of road and trade links between Flanders and Italy. The passage from the Vosges massif to the south is, therefore, part of a road network based on a so-called Lotharingian Europe, but by no means exclusive to the Flanders-Italy junction. To avoid climbing the passes of the southern Vosges, other trade routes took in the Alsatian plain or the Franche-Comté passes. The flourishing forestry and mining activities of the 15th to 17th centuries in the Upper Moselle Valley at the foot of the Ballon d'Alsace reinforced the local traffic around the Bussang pass, where raw material sites and processing factories were concentrated. The industrial and agropastoral activities of the Upper Moselle also encouraged the immigration of skilled workers from German-speaking countries on the Roman side of the pass, such as miners, marcaires from Switzerland, Alsace, and Germany, and coal miners from Sweden, the Tyrol and the Black Forest in the mountainous area between the Col du Bussang and the Col des Charbonniers. Defourny's Trésor des Chartes de Lorraine does not speak in terms of cols but rather of “passages” or “pertuis” in the village of Vôge. Situated at the crossroads of the Romanesque cultural sphere on the one hand and the Germanic world on the other, the Col de Bussang remains an ancestral frontier between various entities: sovereign states, temporal abbatial or canonical principalities, archdioceses, or linguistic areas. However, its vocation as a passageway has always outweighed its function as a natural frontier.