Generated by GPT-5-mini| Sansuc | |
|---|---|
| Name | Sansuc |
| Settlement type | Village |
Sansuc is a toponym associated with a small settlement whose identity appears in regional records and genealogical sources. The name recurs in historical registers, cadastral maps, parish lists and travelogues, yielding connections to multiple families, local institutions, neighboring towns and wider provincial networks.
The name is recorded alongside Latin notations in cadasters and appears in dictionaries of Old French and Occitan place-names, prompting comparisons to entries in the Dictionnaire Étymologique and works by Albert Dauzat, Gustave Schlumberger, François de Beaurepaire. Variant spellings occur in archives such as the Archives départementales and in ecclesiastical registers of the Catholic Church; examples include variants found in lists compiled by the Société de l'Histoire de France and referenced in studies by Ernest Nègre and Paul Léon. Cartographers from the era of Cassini to the twentieth century, including the Institut Géographique National, record orthographic shifts mirrored in notarial acts preserved at the Archives Nationales and municipal annals managed by Conseil général offices.
Early mentions appear in feudal-era charters related to local seigniories recorded in collections edited by the Bibliothèque nationale de France, with ties to noble houses documented in rolls alongside names from Capetian administration and fealty lists that include references comparable to entries for Count of Toulouse holdings. Property transfers and tithes in episcopal registers of the Diocese of Clermont and the Diocese of Moulins suggest tenure patterns like those seen in the reigns of Louis IX and Philip IV. Military levies and muster rolls contemporaneous with the Hundred Years' War and the Wars of Religion show demographic impacts similar to villages appearing in dispatches to the Parlement de Paris. Land surveys conducted during the Ancien Régime and later during the French Revolution's cadastral reforms parallel documentation held by the Conseil Constitutionnel and the Préfecture archives. Local episodes intersect with regional events such as the Jacquerie uprisings and peasant disturbances recorded by historians like Georges Lefebvre and Jules Michelet.
Toponymic occurrences are plotted in atlases produced by the IGN and appear across departments comparable to patterns shown in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region and neighboring areas represented in studies by the INSEE. Population registers and civil status records in municipal bureaux list households similar to those catalogued for rural communes in the work of demographers at the Institut national d'études démographiques and the École des hautes études en sciences sociales. Migration flows recorded in emigration logs to port cities such as Le Havre and Bordeaux mirror broader rural exodus trends analyzed in monographs by Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie and Fernand Braudel. Topography noted on geological maps by the Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières and hydrological surveys by the Office national de l'eau situate occurrences near features catalogued by the Service hydrographique.
Local rites and saint days documented in parish calendars align with patterns in liturgical books preserved by the Vatican Archives and the Bibliothèque municipale of regional capitals like Clermont-Ferrand and Vichy. Folklore collectors linked motifs to compilations by Paul Sébillot and Arnold van Gennep, and ethnographers from the Musée de l'Homme have classified ceremonies resembling those recorded for neighboring hamlets in the inventories of the Ministère de la Culture. Oral history projects archived at university centers including Université Clermont Auvergne and Université Jean Moulin Lyon 3 contain testimonies about festivals, agricultural calendars and craft traditions comparable to those catalogued by the Société des Traditions Populaires. Architectural elements in local churches and manor houses have been surveyed by the Monuments Historiques service and referenced in conservation dossiers lodged with the Direction régionale des Affaires culturelles.
Genealogical reconstructions feature surnames that appear in notarial deeds and heraldic rolls stored with the Société généalogique and the College of Arms-style registries; families have been cross-referenced in noble genealogies alongside entries in the Almanach de Gotha and provincial peerage lists. Clergy recorded in ordination registers link to bishops of sees like the Diocese of Le Puy-en-Velay or the Archdiocese of Lyon; lay figures surface in municipal council minutes comparable to those preserved for mayors in the Association des Maires de France. Military careers of local sons are traceable in veterans' files at the Service historique de la Défense and in mobilization lists for conflicts including the Franco-Prussian War, World War I and World War II. Merchants and artisans appear in guild rolls akin to those catalogued by scholars of the Chambre de commerce and in industrial surveys produced by regional chambers such as the Chambre de commerce et d'industrie de Clermont-Ferrand.
Twentieth- and twenty-first-century transformations are documented through municipal council archives, regional planning reports by the Agence d'urbanisme and rural development initiatives funded by the Conseil régional and the European Union. Emigration and diaspora destinations correspond to migration currents tracked by the Organisation internationale pour les migrations and national immigrant registries in countries like Canada, United States, Argentina and Australia, with family histories preserved in community associations and diaspora networks referenced in studies by the Institut français and transnational research centers. Heritage preservation projects have been supported by listings with the Inventaire général du patrimoine culturel and by grants from bodies such as the Fondation du Patrimoine; contemporary scholarship appears in journals edited by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and proceedings of conferences at institutions like the Collège de France.
Category:Geography