|
EUR 75 - 140 Hotel Du Parc - Manoir Du Baron Blanc
Hotel du Parc-Manoir du Baron Blanc sits in a large parc, a 10-minute drive from La Sambuy ski station. Its rooms have satellite TV and free Wi-Fi int… MoreEUR 50 - 96 Hotel de Genève
Hotel de Geneve is located in the heart of Faverges country, 6 kilometers away from the lake of Annecy. It offers free parking and free Wi-Fi.
Rooms … More | ||||||||||||
Faverges is a town and commune in France|commune of the Haute-Savoie département in France|département, in France. It occupies the glacial valley which gave birth to Lake Annecy.
Originally, at the end of the ice age, the lake extended some 30km, from Sillingy all the way to the site of Faverges, at the base of the Dent de Cons mountain. In those times, the waters of the lake joined the Isère River|river Isère, and people first settled the lakeshores and sunny slopes.
The digs in Viuz and at the Thovey site in Faverges have yielded a great deal of information about Gallo-Roman times, some two thousand years ago. The vicus of Viuz, which covered some fifty acres (200,000 m²), was an important stop along the Roman road which ran from Turin to Geneva. Merovingian times also left numerous traces on the landscape. In the Middle Ages, pre-industrial metalworks were renowned for their iron and copper tools and jewelry. Numerous forges, making nails, clasps, and all types of iron implements, were built along the rivers and streams from which they derived some of their energy needs. The Tamié Abbey was founded in 1132, and Faverges castle around 1250. At that time, Rodolphe (or "Ruph") lived a hermit's life on a nearby mountain and left his name to the hamlet of St. Ruph. The deep religious fervor of the 14th and 15th centuries is responsible for the ten chapels and sanctuaries dedicated to St. Ruph in the area.
The French Revolution left few traces on the community, except for some vandalism to the town church. In 1811, the castle was turned into a cotton-weaving factory, thus launching Faverges into the Industrial Revolution. This is a fitting heritage for a town whose name derives from the Latin faber, fabricae (manufacture).
Faverges now has several important factories (Staubli, S.T. Dupont, Bourgeois) providing some 2,500 jobs, which is especially remarkable in that Faverges itself has only some 7,000 inhabitants.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Faverges". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.