Saint-Pierre | |
Commune Status: | Subprefecture and commune |
Adjustable Map: | Locator map of Saint-Pierre - Martinique 2018.png |
Map Size: | 250px |
Image Coat Of Arms: | Blason ville fr Saint-Pierre (Martinique).svg |
Map Caption: | Location of the commune (in red) within Martinique |
Coordinates: | 14.7417°N -61.1758°W |
Arrondissement: | Saint-Pierre |
Mayor: | Christian Rapha[1] |
Term: | 2020 - 2026 |
Intercommunality: | CA Pays Nord Martinique |
Elevation Min M: | 0 |
Elevation Max M: | 1397 |
Area Km2: | 38.72 |
Insee: | 97225 |
Postal Code: | 97250 |
Saint-Pierre (; pronounced as /fr/; Martinican Creole: Senpiè) is a town and commune of France's Caribbean overseas department of Martinique, founded in 1635 by Pierre Belain d'Esnambuc. Before the total destruction of Saint-Pierre by a volcanic eruption in 1902, it was the most important city of Martinique culturally and economically, being known as "the Paris of the Caribbean". While Fort-de-France was the official administrative capital, Saint-Pierre was the cultural capital of Martinique. After the disaster, Fort-de-France grew in economic importance.
Saint-Pierre was founded in 1635 by Pierre Belain d'Esnambuc, a French trader and adventurer, as the first permanent French colony on the island of Martinique.
The Great Hurricane of 1780 produced a storm-surge of 250NaN0 which "inundated the city, destroying all houses" and killed 9,000 people.[2]
See main article: 1902 eruption of Mount Pelée. The town was again destroyed in 1902, when the volcano Mount Pelée erupted, killing 28,000 people. The entire population of the town, as well as people from neighboring villages who had taken refuge in the supposedly safe city, died, except for three people—a young girl, Havivra da Ifrile, a prisoner by the name of Louis-Auguste Cyparis (known also by various other names), who later toured the world with the Barnum and Bailey Circus, and Léon Compère-Léandre, who lived at the edge of the city.[3] [4] [5]
Legend has it that the town's doom was forecast by loud groaning noises from within the volcano, but the mayor of the town had it blocked off to prevent people from leaving during an election. This story appears to have originated with one of the island's newspapers, published by a political opponent of the governor. Actually, there was considerable eruptive activity in the two weeks prior to the fatal blast, but since the phenomenon of the pyroclastic flow (fr|nuée ardente) was not yet understood, the danger was perceived to be from lava flows, which, it was believed, would be stopped by two valleys between the volcano and the city.
On 6 October 2010, Saint-Pierre recorded a temperature of 36.5C, which is the highest temperature to have ever been recorded in Martinique.[6]
Saint-Pierre has a tropical monsoon climate (Köppen climate classification Am). The average annual temperature in Saint-Pierre is . The average annual rainfall is with August as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in August, at around, and lowest in January, at around . The highest temperature ever recorded in Saint-Pierre was on 6 October 2010; the coldest temperature ever recorded was on 3 February 2005.
The city of Saint-Pierre was never restored to its former entirety, though some villages were built in later decades on its place.
Today, the town is the seat of the Arrondissement of Saint-Pierre.[7] It has been designated as a "City of Art and History".[8] There are many historic remains, and a Volcanological Museum .
All that remains are ships sunk due to the volcanic eruption as the wrecks of Saint-Pierre harbor. They were discovered by . today they are a reference in terms of scuba diving in Martinique.