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It is the largest municipality on the Île de Ré by area, and the second largest by population, second to Sainte-Marie-de-Ré on the southern tip of the island.
La Flotte was declared one of the most beautiful villages in France by the eponymous independent tourism organization Les Plus Beaux Villages de France, and since 2011, the town has been a part of the departmental government's "Stone and Water Villages" tourism initiative to promote notable coastal and waterfront locales (i.e., where the stone (city) meets the water (sea, river etc.).
Geography
Town planning
The commune of La Flotte contains the town proper and a marina. La Flotte is an urban municipality, part of the urban unit of La Flotte, which also contains the commune of Saint-Martin-de-Ré.[4] In addition, the municipality is part of the attraction area of La Flotte, covering 4 communes.[3]
Coastline
The shoreline of La Flotte is bordered by small cliffs, and is home to Arnéult Beach, an artificial beach that has to be re-sanded each year.
As it is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean, La Flotte is a coastal municipality as defined by the Coastline Act (1986).[5] As a result specific town planning provisions apply in order to preserve the natural spaces, sites, landscapes and the ecological balance of the coast, including a prohibition on construction along the coastline.[6]
Land use
A sizable amount of the land in La Flotte is agricultural, 47% in 2018, down from 55.1% in 1990. The detailed breakdown in 2018 is as follows: forests (34.3%), permanent crops (18.3%), urbanized areas (17.9%), heterogeneous agricultural areas (15.9%), arable land (9.1%), meadows (3.7%), artificial green spaces, non-agricultural (0.5%), coastal wetlands (0.4%).[7]
Economic activity
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2023)
Agriculture, asparagus, potatoes, vine.
Oyster farming, boating, fishing.
Tourism. Accommodation: six hotels, five campsites, guest houses, seasonal rentals.
In 1627, an English invasion force under the command of George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, attacked the island in order to relieve the Siege of La Rochelle. After three months of siege, the Marquis de Toiras and a relief force of French ships and troops managed to repel the Duke, who was forced to withdraw in defeat.[8] The English lost more than 4,000 out of 7,000 troops during the campaign. After repelling the English assault, the French Guards retreated through the town of La Flotte, and burned three English vessels there in the port and returned to Fort La Prée.
La Flotte was the home of Gustave Dechézeaux (1760-1794), a member of the National Convention. A victim of the Reign of Terror, he was guillotined at Rochefort on 17 January 1794 for his vote against the execution of Louis XVI.[9] He was later given a posthumous pardon by the Convention on 3 May 1795.[10]
Government
Mayors
List of mayors
Term
Name
Occupation
1790
1791
Jean Henry-Laine
nobility
1791
1793
N J. Brizard-Durocq
merchant
1793
1793
Porsain Coursolle
merchant
1793
1794
Joshua Sibille
nobility
1794
1796
Hibry
merchant
1796
1802
Jacques Louis Rateau
merchant
1802
1805
Jean Pierre Derame
merchant
1805
1814
Pierre Valleau
merchant
1815
1825
Jean Pierre Derame
merchant
1826
1833
John Hector Lem
landlord
1834
1837
JJ Margotteau
merchant
1837
1852
Adrian Ponsin
doctor
1852
1855
Charles Villeneau
landlord
1855
1855*
Francois Maurice Gaussens
merchant
1855
1869
Sebastien Sibille-Lavertu
notary
1869
1870 **
Jean Emile Fourgnaud
doctor
1869
1870 **
Marc Brin
merchant
1869
1870 **
Etienne Margotteau
merchant
1870
1870 **
Charles Biret
notary
1870
1871
Jean Emile Fourgnaud
doctor
1871
1877
Aimed Napoleon Bos
draper
1877
1878
Charles Biret
notary
1878
1882
Aimed Napoleon Bos
draper
1882
1896
Camille Mague
landlord
1896
1928
Charles Biret
notary
1928
1935
Aristide Guignier
farmer
1935
Gaston Lem
1947
1952
Eugene Chauffour
trader
1952
1959
Pierre Brochard
retired officer
1959
1971
Guy Margotteau
retired director of overseas France
1971
1977
Raymond Poncet
oyster farmer
1977
2020
Leon Gendre
hotelier, retired restaurateur, former general councilor
2020
Present
Jean-Paul Héraudeau
* For 1855, municipal councilor acting as mayor.
** For the year 1870, from 21st of October to July, (Fourgnaud, Brin, Margotteau, Biret) municipal commission
2008 municipal elections
1st round of 2008 elections
List driven by
Number of applicants
%
Voice (average of lists)
Elected
Leon Gendre
23
52.6%
1059
23
Jean-Paul Héraudeau
23
47.4%
953
2001 municipal elections
1st round of the 2001 election
List driven by
Number of applicants
%
Voice (average of lists)
Elected
Leon Gendre
23
100.0%
1188
23
1995 municipal elections
1st round of 1995 elections
List driven by
Number of applicants
%
Voice (average of lists)
Elected
Leon Gendre
23
52.0%
824
15
Raymond Grassineau
23
48.0%
760
8
1989 municipal elections
1st round of 1989 elections
List driven by
Number of applicants
%
Voice (average of lists)
Elected
Leon Gendre
49.4%
735
James roy
27.0%
402
Menanteau
23.6%
350
Demographics
In 2018, the town had 2,759 inhabitants, down 4.8% compared to 2013 (Charente-Maritime: + 2.13%, France excluding Mayotte: +1.78%).
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1793
4,400
—
1800
3,322
−3.94%
1806
2,847
−2.54%
1821
2,556
−0.72%
1831
2,557
+0.00%
1836
2,411
−1.17%
1841
2,429
+0.15%
1846
2,462
+0.27%
1851
2,422
−0.33%
1856
2,352
−0.58%
1861
2,386
+0.29%
1866
2,450
+0.53%
1872
2,315
−0.94%
1876
2,395
+0.85%
1881
2,389
−0.05%
1886
2,381
−0.07%
1891
2,447
+0.55%
1896
2,373
−0.61%
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1901
2,267
−0.91%
1906
2,096
−1.56%
1911
2,118
+0.21%
1921
1,813
−1.54%
1926
1,629
−2.12%
1931
1,475
−1.97%
1936
1,396
−1.09%
1946
1,260
−1.02%
1954
1,393
+1.26%
1962
1,578
+1.57%
1968
1,681
+1.06%
1975
1,737
+0.47%
1982
1,878
+1.12%
1990
2,452
+3.39%
1999
2,737
+1.23%
2007
2,923
+0.83%
2012
2,863
−0.41%
2017
2,762
−0.72%
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
The Port: formerly a commercial port for wine and salt, then a fishing port. It is essentially a marina today. Its capacity is 200 berths on pontoons and 150 berths in organized moorings.
The ruins of the Cistercian Abbey of Notre-Dame-de-Ré (between Rivedoux-Plage and La Flotte). The site has been classified as a “historic monument” since 21 May 1990.
The Fort La Pree, built in 1625 and partially destroyed by Vauban in 1685.
The Medieval Market.
The Platin Museum, which has collections related to regional culture, Medieval architecture, and maritime history.[13]
The Church of St. Catherine Fleet (or "Church of St. Catherine of Alexandria") Built in the 15th century. Listed, in part, as a Historic Monument, in 1988.
Gustave Dechézeaux (1760-1794), French politician. Member of the National Convention, guillotined in 1794 during the Reign of Terror "for having conspired against the Republic", then posthumously pardoned in 1795.
Jacques Gilles Henri Goguet (1767-1794), General
Léon Gendre, general councilor of the canton of Saint-Martin-de-Ré (reelected in 2011), president of the Community of communes of the island of Ré from 1993 to 2008, mayor of La Flotte since 1977, ex-restaurateur (creator of the restaurant Le Richelieu).
Roger Barberot (1915-2002) - Companion of the Liberation by decree of 7 March 1941, the most decorated sailor in France.