
Last modified: 2008-11-08 by ivan sache
Keywords: rhone-alpes | regional council | rainbow |
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Departments: Ain,
Ardèche,
Drôme,
Isère,
Loire, Rhône,
Savoie,
Haute-Savoie
Bordering Regions: Auvergne,
Bourgogne,
Franche-Comté,
Languedoc-Roussillon,
Provence-Alpes-Côte-d'Azur
Bordering countries: Italy,
Switzerland
Traditional provinces: Burgundy,
Dauphiny,
Languedoc, Comtat
Venaissin, Savoy
Area: 43,698 km2
Population (1995): 5,569,200 inhabitants
Regional prefecture: Lyon
The main problem of the Region Rhône-Alpes is its lack of
geographical and historical homogeneity. The name Rhône-Alpes,
associating a river and a mountain, was probably the best default
choice. The natural division of the Alps is not respected by the
administrative borders, since the limit between the Northern and
Southern Alps goes through the department of
Drôme. This limit was also the border
between Provence and
Dauphiny. Since crossing the
Rhône was extremely difficult in the past,
Ardèche, located on the right bank,
belonged to Languedoc and had few contacts
with Dauphiné.
There is more economical homogeneity, although the departments of
Ardèche, Drôme and Hautes-Alpes
are underdeveloped compared with the other ones.
However, some identity developed with time and the neologism
rhônalpin was coined, the same way the neologism
francilien was coined for Île-de-France.
Ivan Sache, 15 September 2003
Former flag of the Regional Council - Image by Pierre Gay, 2 November 1996
The Regional Council of Rhône-Alpes adopted a flag on 2 January 1991. The flag is white with the regional logotype, made of eight vertical lines which symbolize the eight departments of the region.
Jaume Ollé, 2 November 1996
The vertical lines represent the future and the ambitions, the
horizontal lines represent competences and determination. The rainbow
colors represent performance, modernism, youth and quality of life.
The blue line represents river Rhône. It shows the coherence
of a great European region. The graphism shows also the West to
East region's elevation from the plains to the mountains.
Tristan Blaudet, 14 September 2003