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Luberon

Map of Luberon

See our large, interactive Map of Luberon for more detail, including satellite views of Luberon.

This map of the Luberon shows the many hillside villages around Apt, including Bonnieux, Lacoste, Roussillon and Castellet.

 
 
 
 

The Luberon Massif has a maximum altitude of 1,256 m and an area of about 600 km². It is composed of two mountain ranges: the Big Luberon and the Little Luberon, lying in the middle of Provence in the far south of France. The valley between them contains a number of towns and villages as well as agricultural land.

The total number of inhabitants varies greatly between winter and summer, due to a massive influx of tourists during the warm season.

It is a favourite destination for French high society and British and American visitors because of the pleasant and picturesque towns and villages, comfortable way of life, agricultural richness, historical and cultural associations (e.g. Samuel Beckett lived in Roussillon during World War II), and hiking trails.

In the 1970s, people came from all over France to "Le Luberon" in search of a communitarian ideal.

The Force de frappe or French strategic nuclear arsenal used to be nearby, underground, on "Le plateau d'Albion" before being dismantled in the late 1980s.

In the last decades the Luberon became known in the English-speaking world especially through a series of books by Peter Mayle giving the chronicle of a British expatriate who settled in the village of Ménerbes.

Towns and villages of the Luberon

  • Apt
  • Bonnieux
  • Gordes
  • Lacoste
  • Ménerbes
  • Oppéde-le-Vieux
  • Roussillon
  • Goult.

References

  • Mayle, Peter. A year in Provence. New York : Vintage Books, 1991.
  • Mayle, Peter. Encore Provence : new adventures in the south of France. New York : Knopf, 1999.
  • Mayle, Peter. Toujours Provence. New York : Knopf, 1991
 
 
 
 

This article is licenced under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Luberon".

User comments

From: Motor Mouth
Posted: 23 July 2006
Vasarely in Gordes
Gordes used to have a great gallery dedicated to Victor Vasarely, the op-artist. Last time I was there it had closed. I think there was some dispute over his estate and the collection moved to Paris or somewhere. You can still see some of his work in a small commercial gallery in Gordes.
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