Generated by GPT-5-mini| Cuisy-en-Almont | |
|---|---|
| Name | Cuisy-en-Almont |
| Commune status | Commune |
| Arrondissement | Montbard |
| Canton | Semur-en-Auxois |
| Insee | 21218 |
| Postal code | 21350 |
| Term | 2020–2026 |
| Intercommunality | Terres d'Auxois |
| Elevation m | 380 |
| Elevation min m | 318 |
| Elevation max m | 498 |
| Area km2 | 8.12 |
Cuisy-en-Almont is a small commune in the Côte-d'Or department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region of eastern France. Situated within the arrondissement of Montbard and the canton of Semur-en-Auxois, the commune lies in a rural landscape characterized by rolling hills and mixed woodland. Its administrative, demographic, and cultural profile reflects patterns common to small communes across Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, Côte-d'Or, and the historical province of Burgundy.
Cuisy-en-Almont is located in the northern portion of Côte-d'Or near the borders of Yonne and Nièvre, positioned amid the plateau and valley systems that connect to the Saône River watershed and the Seine River basin through local tributaries. The commune's topography ranges from roughly 318 to 498 metres above sea level, comparable to elevations found near Morvan Regional Natural Park and the Forêt de Châtillon. Land use consists of smallholdings, pasture, and patches of deciduous forest similar to landscapes around Semur-en-Auxois and Alise-Sainte-Reine. Road connections tie the commune to departmental routes that lead toward Montbard and Dijon, integrating it into regional networks linked with Bourgogne wine territory and heritage corridors.
The area occupied by the commune shares historical trajectories with settlements documented since the Gallo-Roman period in Burgundy, reflecting patterns observable in nearby Alésia and rural sites excavated in Côte-d'Or. Medieval records align its fate with feudal holdings under lords tied to Duchy of Burgundy institutions and the ecclesiastical jurisdictions of dioceses such as Dijon Cathedral's see. During early modern conflicts including the Thirty Years' War and later Revolutionary administrative reorganizations that created departments of France and the modern Côte-d'Or department, local land tenure and communal governance transformed alongside neighboring communes like Semur-en-Auxois. Twentieth-century events including mobilizations for World War I and World War II affected population and land use, paralleling experience in rural Bourgogne communities.
The commune is administered under France's municipal framework established after the French Revolution and codified in the laws of the Third Republic that shape mayoral powers and municipal councils seen in communes such as Nuits-Saint-Georges and Beaune. It belongs to the intercommunal structure Terres d'Auxois, which coordinates services similar to intercommunalities around Montbard. Electoral cycles follow national schedules for municipal elections, and judicial-administrative matters are served by tribunals in larger centers like Dijon and Auxerre.
Demographic trends in Cuisy-en-Almont mirror patterns observed in many small communes across Bourgogne-Franche-Comté with periods of rural depopulation and recent stabilization influenced by proximity to regional hubs such as Montbard and Semur-en-Auxois. Population figures fluctuate with economic shifts tied to agricultural mechanization and mobility trends shaped by connections to Dijon and commuter patterns toward industrial centers like Le Creusot.
The local economy is dominated by small-scale agriculture, forestry, and artisanal activities similar to economic compositions in neighboring communes like Flavigny-sur-Ozerain and Vitteaux. Services are limited; residents rely on nearby market towns—Semur-en-Auxois, Montbard, and Dijon—for hospitals such as Centre Hospitalier de Montbard, secondary education in collèges and lycées, banking offices, and administrative services provided by departmental seats. Rural tourism linked to Burgundy wine routes and heritage sites contributes marginally alongside diversified farm enterprises.
Notable local features include a parish church typical of regional ecclesiastical architecture influenced by styles seen in Romanesque churches across Burgundy and village ensembles reminiscent of those conserved in Les Plus Beaux Villages de France listings like Flavigny-sur-Ozerain. Woodland trails and viewpoints connect to regional walking networks that access landmarks such as Château de Semur-en-Auxois and remnants of medieval fortifications characteristic of the Auxois area. Nearby archaeological and historical interest points include the Alésia site and heritage museums in Dijon and Montbard.
Transport access is primarily by departmental roads that link the commune to the regional road network toward Montbard, Dijon, and the A6 corridor connecting Paris and Lyon. Rail services are available at stations in Montbard and Dijon-Ville which form part of national lines served by SNCF and TGV connections to major nodes such as Paris Gare de Lyon and Lyon Part-Dieu. Local public transport is limited; mobility depends on private vehicles and regional bus services that serve surrounding market towns.
Individuals associated with the commune are typically local figures—clergy, landholders, and veterans—whose biographies intersect with regional personalities from Burgundy such as administrators linked to Montbard and cultural figures recorded in departmental archives comparable to those preserving the legacies of individuals from Semur-en-Auxois and Dijon.
Category:Communes of Côte-d'Or