Nestier
Nestier (French pronunciation: [nɛstje]; Occitan: Nestièr) is a French commune located in the department of Hautes-Pyrenees, in the region Occitanie. Its historic region is the Gascony. Its geography is that of a village of Piedmont Pyrenean characterized by a mountain climate subject to ocean and continental influences. Its history is marked by the following periods : the prehistory with the remains of the Neanderthal cave of the "Cap de la Bielle" ; Modern era with two central characters : François de Saint-Paul and Louis de Cazaux, Lords de Nestier, the first large army officer of Louis XIV and Governor of the "Val de Aran", the second large master of the Cavalry School of Versailles and squire Cavalcadour of Louis XV ; the post-revolutionary period : Nestier is then chief town of canton and sees the construction of the devotional site called "Calvaire du Mont-Arès" ; the contemporary period with the reconstruction of the calvary registered with the inventory of the historical monuments and the realization of a organic swim. Its peasant sociology has been strongly marked by the pyrenean traditions and the lifestyles that rest essentially, until the middle of XXe s., on a polyculture of subsistence. At XXIe s., Nestier undergoes the deep transformations of the rural world within a new territorial reorganization. GeographyClimateNestier has an oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification Cfb). The average annual temperature in Nestier is 11.8 °C (53.2 °F). The average annual rainfall is 1,049.8 mm (41.33 in) with May as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in July, at around 19.5 °C (67.1 °F), and lowest in January, at around 4.7 °C (40.5 °F). The highest temperature ever recorded in Nestier was 41.0 °C (105.8 °F) on 28 July 1947; the coldest temperature ever recorded was −20.0 °C (−4.0 °F) on 16 February 1956.
See alsoReferences
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Nestier.
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