Home

Version FrançaiseVersiòn espanõla
 
 
 
Search
Help ?

Click here to enter your
email address and
receive a weekly update
of the «pays’» news



Add to Favorites
Add to Favorites




Links
Contact us
Who are we ?





St Alvère in the Périgord :
the first truffle market
in France to have gone
on-line !
 

Version Française
 
     

 

Bosset is a small village in the heart of the Landais region with a population of 209 and a surface area of 1451 hectares. The Lidoire, a tributary of the Dordogne River, has its source at Bosset.

Historically speaking, the name of the parish appears in a 13th century terrier for the first time written as ‘Borses’. It was only during the trial of Pierre Mortier that the Latin version, ‘Bos Siccus’ - from which the current name is derived - first appears. In 1744 appears the rather odd form ‘Bossuet’.

The patron saint of the village is St James the Elder whose symbol is a shell (‘Coquille St Jacques’).
The village coat of arms bears a sable tree and the azure chief is charged with a silver Coquille St Jacques (or, scallop) representing both its patron saint and the origins of its name.
 

     
 

Up until the First World War, a large animal fair took place on the first of February, March, April, May and September. Cows - Limousine and Garonnaise, known as the ‘Blondes d’Aquitaine’- from the Dronne and Isle valleys were sold in the school playground. Piglets were traded on the Lunas road, sheep on the square next to today’s grocery store and, meanwhile, charlatans and profiteers lined up by the cemetery wall.
There was regularly a tombola whose owner cried out in Patois « Fay vira piti - fay vira -gagnora uno bolo » (“Turn it little one, turn it and you’ll win a bowl”).
 

   
 

Text translated by Pays du Grand Bergeracois (professional translator).