Situated 15 km (9.3 mi) from Metz, Vigy lies on the border of Germany and Luxembourg. The village of Vigy is located in a sector recognized for its landscape qualities. Vigy enjoys a privileged location on the edge of a forest.
The name of the village may come from a man of Gallo-Roman origin, Vigius.
History
Founded as a city by the Romans or Gallo-Romans, Vigy was given to the Abbey of Saint-Arnould on 23 June 715. In 1365, the people of Vigy were placed under the protection of Luxembourg. On 12 September 1635 almost the entirety of the village was burned by the Spanish. It was reattached to France in 1648.
The early prosperity of the village was largely due to the nearby iron and steel industries. Many of these industries have since disappeared. Nowadays, industry consists of vehicle manufacturing and logistics.
Demography
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1793
570
—
1800
662
+2.16%
1806
632
−0.77%
1821
802
+1.60%
1836
883
+0.64%
1841
851
−0.74%
1861
824
−0.16%
1866
821
−0.07%
1871
763
−1.45%
1875
778
+0.49%
1880
761
−0.44%
1885
734
−0.72%
1890
659
−2.13%
1895
656
−0.09%
1900
615
−1.28%
1905
818
+5.87%
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1910
680
−3.63%
1921
608
−1.01%
1926
605
−0.10%
1931
629
+0.78%
1936
603
−0.84%
1946
612
+0.15%
1954
590
−0.46%
1962
766
+3.32%
1968
930
+3.29%
1975
984
+0.81%
1982
1,123
+1.91%
1990
1,172
+0.54%
1999
1,278
+0.97%
2007
1,283
+0.05%
2012
1,511
+3.33%
2017
1,716
+2.58%
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 region, with its rich and varied historical heritage, lends itself to eco-tourism.[6]
Field Maze
As a family or with a group of friends, your challenge is to find your way through the corn maze, decoding the key to puzzles you will find signposted along the way.
There is a field maze, which is open from July to September. Each year there is a new field Maze.[7]
Steam train
This line was linked to the former SNCF Vigy to Hombourg-Budange one. In 1985, the local authorities had stopped supporting the line. ALEMF operated in this line with the definition of a "touristic" railway since 1986.[8][9]
On 1 April 1908 was put in regular circulation the first engine at vapor. The line celebrated its centenary on 24 May 2008.
It is open from April to October.
Rail-cycle (Velorail in French)
Rail-cycle with 4 wheels. A single bicycle may also be modified with an outrigger and locating wheels to operate upon rails
As the legend says: Once upon a time a group of hunter was following a deer in the forest of St. Hubert. It was a very very hot day and the people were very thirsty. They have been suffering when suddenly their horses found a spring. To thank it for the nature they built a little chapel next to the spring.[12]
The chapel is linked in legend to Charlemagne and may have existed as early as 806.
In 1049, the Pope Leo IX would have come to devote the church. During the centuries the church of St. Arnold had the authority above the chapel.
Unfortunately, during the French Revolution the chapel was destroyed. Later the chapel
has been rebuilt.
In 1884, the reconstruction of the chapel started by Abbé Cazin and the Vicomte de Coetlosquet offered three windows for
the chapel. It got the shape we can see now.
Today, there are a new small church in the middle of forest. On the Monday of Pentecost and Corpus Christi (feast) pilgrims come to the chapel.[13]
Adeppa
In 1961, associations and federations of popular education of the Moselle, mobilized around common values ("to allow each citizen to be an actor of the transformation of a company where the Man finds finally his true place"). In 1963, the association ADEPPA of which the goal was to become a training centre of the actors of community life, with the possibility of accommodating, in its houses of lodging, of many groups in the middle of an exceptional landscape
Adeppa is located at Vigy. Adeppa is a popular resort on the edge of a forest.
Sisters of Divine Providence (Soeurs de la divine providence) in Vigy (Hessange)
The Congregation of the Sisters of Divine Providence was founded by John Martin Moye, who with the assistance of Mademoiselle Marguerite LeComte, opened the first school of congregation at Vigy in 1762. After the French Revolution, all sisters was transferred to St. Jean de Bassel in Lorraine.[17][18]
Films & documents
You can watch few minutes in Vigy in these French films
The Congregation of the Sisters of Divine Providence was founded by John Martin Moye, who with the assistance of Mademoiselle Marguerite LeComte, opened the first school of congregation at Vigy in 1762. After the French Revolution, all sisters was transferred to St. Jean de Bassel in Lorraine.[22][23]
Today there are three public schools.
Infrastructure
Vigy is located at the intersection of two majors axes: A4 motorway (going from Paris to Strasbourg) and the A31 motorway (going to Luxembourg at the North and towards Nancy)
A4 - Number 37 - Ennery-Argancy
A31 - Hauconcourt
The nearest railway station is in Metz, about 15 km (9.3 mi) away.
The nearest airports are ETZ - Metz Nancy Lorraine 24.5 km (15.2 mi) south, LUX - Luxemburg Luxembourg 47.9 km (29.8 mi) north, ENC - Nancy Essey 56.7 km (35.2 mi) south, SCN - Saarbruecken Saarbrücken 59.0 km (36.7 mi) east
by bus : Going to Metz city or Hagondange station. There are only one bus by day (daily : Monday to Saturday)
The 400,000 volt line connecting Marlenheim (near Strasbourg) to Vigy entered service on April 30, 2009 is the fruit of a consultative process initiated back in 1998. Other line connecting Germany,[24] and Luxembourg.
The dispatching of Vigy reinforcing the electricity transmission capacities of France’s greater eastern area.
Notable people
Catherine Marsal, born 20 January 1971 in Metz, [25] is a retired female racing cyclist from France. She represented her native country at four Summer Olympics: 1988, 1992, 1996, and 2000. Her biggest achievements were winning the 1990 Giro d'Italia Femminile and the world title in the women's individual road race (1990).
^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 31 December 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Moselle tourism