The inhabitants of the commune are known as Agnosiens or Agnosiennes.[4]
Geography
Agnos is located just 2 km south of Oloron-Sainte-Marie and some 25 km southwest of Pau. It can be accessed on the D155 road from Bidos in the northeast coming southwest to the village then continuing southeast to Gurmençon. The D555 road also passes through the commune from the north and joins the D155 northeast of the village.[5] The commune is mixed farmland and forests with the forests scattered throughout the commune.
The commune name in béarnais is Anhos. Michel Grosclaude suggested that Agnos came from a Latin man's name Annius with an Aqitaine suffix -ossum the whole meaning "domain of Annius".[8]
The following table details the origins of the commune name and other names in the commune.
Paul Raymond noted on page 3 of his 1863 dictionary that in 1385 Agnos had seventeen fires and depended on the bailiwick of Oloron.[7]
The commune was merged with Gurmençon on 1 February 1973 to form the commune called Val-du-Gave d'Aspe. It was restored to its previous status on 1 January 1983.
The town is part of five inter-communal organisations:
the Community of communes of Haut Béarn
the SIVU to limit floods in Agnos
the AEP Union for Agnos-Gurmençon
the Inter-communal Union for Sanitisation for the Aspe gateway
the energy union for Pyrénées-Atlantiques
Population
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1793
346
—
1800
301
−1.97%
1806
328
+1.44%
1821
375
+0.90%
1831
421
+1.16%
1836
479
+2.61%
1841
473
−0.25%
1846
482
+0.38%
1851
461
−0.89%
1856
431
−1.34%
1861
431
+0.00%
1866
419
−0.56%
1872
407
−0.48%
1876
372
−2.22%
1881
402
+1.56%
1886
384
−0.91%
1891
405
+1.07%
1896
405
+0.00%
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1901
412
+0.34%
1906
406
−0.29%
1911
403
−0.15%
1921
401
−0.05%
1926
374
−1.38%
1931
373
−0.05%
1936
368
−0.27%
1946
351
−0.47%
1954
390
+1.33%
1962
372
−0.59%
1968
353
−0.87%
1975
465
+4.02%
1982
478
+0.39%
1990
645
+3.82%
1999
751
+1.70%
2007
834
+1.32%
2012
910
+1.76%
2017
1,019
+2.29%
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 Church has a Trinitarian steeple (the presence of a Bell-gable or campenard). It contains many items which are registered as historical objects (although some were destroyed by fire in 1968):
The Forests of Bugangue[22] and Labaigt are inter-association woods managed by the National Office of Forests (ONF)[23] which provide valuable shelter for preserving local flora and fauna. Many species are protected. An arboretum is a result of collaboration with the ONF.[24]
The Pyrenees are rich in scenery and the village of Agnos is the starting point of one of the most attractive routes for cycling across the foothills: From Agnos to Mail Arrouil and back (four hours of cycling or seven hours of walking) in a variety of environments, moors, rocks, meadows with views of the Pyrenees. This route, like many others, is managed by the local hiking plan of the Community of communes of Piémont Oloronais (CCPO).[25]
Facilities
Associations
The model aircraft club[26] welcomes its members in the Sayette neighborhood.
Education
The town has a primary school.
Multi-Media Library
The Multi-media library project of the CCPO identified the municipal library of Agnos as a relay point.
Sports and sports equipment
The basketball club merged with that of Asasp in 2006 to form BCHB (Basketball Club of Haut-Bearn).
Notable People linked to the commune
Catherine Capdevielle, born in 1938 in Agnos, is an athlete specialising in ordeal sprinting.
^"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 17 December 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2021.