Subprefecture and commune in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France
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The future site of Gex was inhabited around 1800 BC. Around 220 BC, a group of Gallic warriors known as the Gaesatae resided in the area around Gex. Afterwards, the town was part of Roman Gaul.
In 1252, Léonette of Geneva, Lady of Gex, descendant of the count of Geneva, Amadeus I, married Simon of Joinville, son of Simon of Joinville and Beatrix of Auxonne, Lady of Marnay. The city of Gex was included in her dowry. Later that century, the Joinvilles set up a castellan and a judge in the town.
On November 13, 1353, the town of Gex as well as its castle were captured by Savoy,[3] and the pays de Gex was incorporated into the Savoyard state for nearly two centuries. The pays de Gex was invaded in 1536 by the Canton of Bern. The Bernese established a bailiwick at Gex, managed by a bailiff. Walls were built in 1550.
The pays de Gex was returned to the Duchy of Savoy by the treaties of Nyon in 1563 and Lausanne in 1564. The Genevans seized it in 1589. Savoy, with the assistance of Spain, tried several times to take back the pays de Gex, but they were unsuccessful. During these attacks, the town of Gex was burned in 1590 on July 23 and again on July 30; few of the houses withstood the fires.
In 1601, during the reign of Henry IV, control of the pays de Gex passed to France as part of the Treaty of Lyon.[4]
Historically, citizens spoke a dialect of the Franco-Provençal language but this dialect is not in use anymore. In 1910 the commune of Mijoux was created from part of the commune of Gex.[7]
Population
Population data for 1906 and earlier include the commune of Mijoux.
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1793
2,398
—
1800
2,415
+0.10%
1806
2,354
−0.43%
1821
2,536
+0.50%
1831
2,834
+1.12%
1836
2,894
+0.42%
1841
2,835
−0.41%
1846
2,785
−0.36%
1851
2,874
+0.63%
1856
2,662
−1.52%
1861
2,602
−0.45%
1866
2,642
+0.31%
1872
2,675
+0.21%
1876
2,719
+0.41%
1881
2,720
+0.01%
1886
2,693
−0.20%
1891
2,659
−0.25%
1896
2,878
+1.60%
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1901
2,822
−0.39%
1906
2,727
−0.68%
1911
2,175
−4.42%
1921
2,030
−0.69%
1926
2,065
+0.34%
1931
2,048
−0.17%
1936
1,966
−0.81%
1946
1,874
−0.48%
1954
2,041
+1.07%
1962
2,361
+1.84%
1968
3,137
+4.85%
1975
4,296
+4.59%
1982
4,868
+1.80%
1990
6,615
+3.91%
1999
7,733
+1.75%
2007
9,505
+2.61%
2012
10,677
+2.35%
2017
13,118
+4.20%
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^"Répertoire national des élus: les maires". data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises (in French). 2 December 2020. Archived from the original on 28 June 2020. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
^Mahmood M. Poonja, Termination of Treaties Owing to Fundamental Change of Circumstances (Clausula Rebus Sic Stantibus): A Doctoral Dissertation [Juris Doctor dissertation, Charles University, Prague, 1977] (Rawalpindi: Abbas Arts, 1982), p. 21.