User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
Verb
pays- third-person singular of pay
French
Etymology
païs, from pagensis, derived from pagus “countryside”. Cognates include Italian paese. Borrowed into Catalan, Portuguese and Spanish as país.Extensive Definition
In France, a pays is an
area whose inhabitants share common geographical, economic,
cultural, or social interests, who have a right to enter into
communal planning contracts under a law known as the Loi Pasqua or LOADT
(Loi d'Orientation pour l'Aménagement et le Développement du
Territoire; English:
Directive law concerning territorial planning and development),
which took effect on February 4,
1995.
It was augmented on June 25, 1999, by the Loi
Voynet or LOADDT (Loi d'Orientation de l'Aménagement Durable du
Territoire). The LOADDT enables the citizens of a community to form
a legally recognized pays after deciding to do so by mutual
consent; its aim is to help bring the inhabitants of urban and
neighboring rural districts into dialogue and agreement.
The Council of Development in each pays assembles
together the elected officials and the economic, social, and
cultural actors, and their associates, into a deliberative forum to
discuss the development policies which should be followed by the
community. While the Council can give advice, submit proposals, and
monitor development projects, it does not have the authority to
make official decisions.
The Charter of the Pays makes it possible to fix
the stakes and the objectives of the community. Few structures are
recognized as pays Voynet, meaning nation-wide, because the
recognition criteria are sometimes far from what the pays are. Then
again, several pays are recognized by the Commission Régionale
d'aménagement et de développement du Territoire.
The Contract of the Pays can be signed among the
members of the pays, or between the pays and its surrounding area,
the department,
the region,
or with the national state when the stakes are
well-identified.
In this context, the French
term pays is not used in the modern sense of "country" but preserves the
original meaning of the Latin word from which
it was derived, pagus, which designated the territory controlled by
a medieval count. The majority of pays are
roughly coextensive with the old counties (e.g., county of Comminges, county
of Ponthieu,
etc.)
Pays of Brittany
Brittany, consisting of 4 departments, is also subdivided into 21 pays.- pays de Brest
- pays de Cornouaille
- pays du Centre-Ouest de Bretagne
- pays de Morlaix
- Pays de Trégor-Goélo
- pays de Guingamp
- pays de Saint-Brieuc
- pays de Centre-Bretagne
- pays de Pontivy
- pays de Lorient
- pays d'Auray
- pays de Vannes
- pays de Ploërmel-Coeur de Bretagne
- pays de Brocéliande
- pays de Dinan
- pays de Saint-Malo
- pays de Fougères
- pays de Rennes
- Pays de Vitré-Porte de Bretagne
- pays es Vallons de Vilaine
- pays de Redon et Vilaine, note this pays straddles 3 departments, including one located outside Brittany, the Loire Atlantique.
Pays of Franche-Comté
La Franche-Comté, consisting of 4 departments, is also subdivided into 16 pays :- pays de l'Aire Urbaine (Belfort-Montbéliard-Héricourt-Delle )
- pays du Doubs Central
- pays du Haut-Doubs
- pays Horloger
- pays de Loue Lison
- pays de Pierrefontaine Les Varans
- pays des Vosges Saônoises
- pays Dolois
- pays du Haut Revermont
- pays de la Haute Vallée de l'Ain
- pays des Lacs et de Petite Montagne
- pays Lédonien
- pays du Haut Jura
- pays Graylois
- pays des Sept Rivières
- pays de Vesoul et du Val de Saône
pays in French: Pays (aménagement du
territoire)
pays in Occitan (post 1500):
parçan