Aussurucq is located in the former province of Soule in the Massif des Arbailles some 30 km west by south-west of Oloron-Sainte-Marie and 25 km east of Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port. Access to the commune is by road D147 from Idaux-Mendy in the north which passes through the village and continues south through the commune to join the D117 on the southern border of the commune. A pastoral road from Béhorléguy to Alçay and Aussurucq passes through the Col d'Aphanize (without crossing it) and generally follows the line of the watershed along the Col de Burdin Olatzé. The commune is mostly rugged and heavily forested however there is some farmland in the north.[4]
The Ruisseau de Guessalia rises in the south of the commune and flows north-east gathering some tributaries to join the Apouhoura north of the commune. The Arangorena forms the north-western border as it flows north-east to join the Saison near Gotein-Libarrenx. The Bidouze rises in the south of the commune and flows north to eventually join the Adour north of Bardos.[4]
Jean-Baptiste Orpustan indicated that the name comes from the basque altzu ("alder tree") which is explained by the position of the valley covered in alder trees. The second part of the name is more enigmatic. According to Orpustan it could be from Urru ("the other side") or iri giving alzu-(i) ri-ku meaning "place in the Alder field".[7]
The following table details the origins of the commune name and other names in the commune.
In the Middle Palaeolithic era Soule was already populated as remains of Neanderthal prehistoric man have been found in the Xaxixiloaga caves in Aussurucq. A tumulus was also reported at shepherd's cabins in Potxo[6] along the D147 road.
The central part of Soule is also called the Messagerie des Arbailles[12] between Basabürü and Pettarra (in the Sauguis-Saint-Étienne, Aussurucq, and Barcus regions).
the inter-communal association for transport from Musculdy to Ordiap;
the inter-communal association to support Basque culture.
Demography
In 2017 the commune had 245 inhabitants.
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1793
596
—
1800
574
−0.54%
1806
637
+1.75%
1821
700
+0.63%
1831
711
+0.16%
1836
632
−2.33%
1841
701
+2.09%
1846
740
+1.09%
1851
716
−0.66%
1856
662
−1.56%
1861
660
−0.06%
1866
640
−0.61%
1872
643
+0.08%
1876
640
−0.12%
1881
604
−1.15%
1886
570
−1.15%
1891
564
−0.21%
1896
570
+0.21%
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1901
523
−1.71%
1906
512
−0.42%
1911
518
+0.23%
1921
472
−0.93%
1926
502
+1.24%
1931
459
−1.78%
1936
437
−0.98%
1946
432
−0.12%
1954
401
−0.93%
1962
379
−0.70%
1968
347
−1.46%
1975
289
−2.58%
1982
293
+0.20%
1990
274
−0.83%
1999
254
−0.84%
2007
254
+0.00%
2012
249
−0.40%
2017
245
−0.32%
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
The village features a dynamic scene related especially to Basque culture. The inhabitants of the village performed the pastoralÜrrüti Jauregiko Peirot in 2002, a play written by the son of the village Niko Etxart, an acclaimed Basque musician.
Civil heritage
The Chateau of Ruthie (11th century) is registered as an historical monument.[16]
A Gaztelu Zahar (Castellum) is at a place called gaztelu at an altitude of 582 metres.
Religious heritage
The town has a church with a Trinitarian steeple or a tower surmounted by three points of nearly equal height.[17] The church contains a processional cross (17th century) which is registered as an historical object.[18]
A wealth of heritage in Aussurucq commune is contained in its sub-soil. Most of the territory of the commune is karstic. The environment is characterized by the presence of natural cavities in complex shapes that have not all yet been discovered or much less explored to date. Departmental cavers have undertaken the exploration, description, and publication of this heritage respecting the environment and the local population. One of the most beautiful caves in the commune is the Nébélé which has been the subject of works and regular explorations since 1972.
The peak of Ascune stands at 860 m, Echagorry is 935 m, Elsarré is 1,153 m, Sihigue is 1,193 m, and Etchecortia is 1,204 m.[6] In the south-west of the commune, Bohorcortia is 1,214 metres high.[6]
Amenities
The town has a primary school (Garaibie).
Notable people linked to the commune
Pierre V de Charritte de Ruthie, born in Aussurucq, was chaplain to François I.[19]
Gilen Epherre, born at Aussurucq in 1911 and died in Bayonne in 1974, was a writer, priest, scholar and important cultural player in the post-war period
^ abJean-Baptiste Orpustan, New Basque Toponymy, Presses universitaires de Bordeaux, 2006, ISBN2 86781 396 4(in French)
^Duchesne Collection, volumes 99 to 114, containing the papers of Oihenart, former Imperial Librarian - Bibliothèque nationale de France
^Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques (in French)
^Chapter of Bayonne in the Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques (in French)
^Customs of Soule in 1520, printed at Pau in 1760 (in French)
^The duty of the messenger of the royal procurer was the surveillance of a defined geographic zone - Paul Raymond, Topographic Dictionary of Béarn-basque country(in French)