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Flag of Bouzonville - Image by Ivan Sache, 6 March 2010
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The municipality of Bouzonville (in German, Busendorf; 4,281 inhabitants in 2007; 1,390 ha; municipal website) is located 35 km east of Thionville and 10 km west of the border with Germany.
Bouzonville is located on river Nied, crossed there by a bridge - once a ford -, on the old Salt Road. The place was settled very early, as proved by Celtic (ceramics, stone mills), Roman (tiles, coins) and Merovingian (cemetary, jewels) remains found in different places. Around year 1000, a permanent settlement emerged close to the river. The disputed etymology of Bouzonville highlights its location in an area of linguistic mixture. Some say that Bouzonville comes from the Celtic root *bus, "mud" (which gave in French boue, "mud"), refering to the marshy surroundings of the river. Another explanation relies on the Latin word bos, "ox", refering to a post on the Salt Road where the merchants stopped. The more "official" etymology of Bouzonville claims that the village was founded by a lord Boso, maybe the King of Provence of the same name. There is not the least evidence of such an origin, which was pushed, if not invented, by the monks of the Benedictine abbey, an alleged royal origin being much more convenient than a muddy one. There is no problem with the etymology of the suffix -ville and its German counterpart -dorf, meaning "a village". "Boso's estate" is the most probable etymology, whoever Boso was.
Bouzonville developed around a Benedictine abbey founded in the 11th  
century by Count of Metz Adalbert and his wife Judith (known as Judith of Luxembourg or Judith of Swabia). Judith watched the building of the  
abbey while her husband went on pilgrimage to the Holy Land to bring  
back relics and a piece of the Holy Cross, which were at the time a  
prerequisite for the success of a religious foundation. The Holy Cross  
abbey was consecrated on 31 January 1033 by Bishop of Metz Theodoric  
II of Luxembourg. Adalbert and Judith are the roots of the hereditary  
Dukes of Lorraine; the first of them was their grandson Gerard II the Great, Duke of Lorraine and Alsace (1048-1070), founder of the town of Nancy. In 1049, Pope Leo X, famous for his voyages, overnighted in the abbey on his way from Reims to Trier.
The monks were expelled from the abbey on 1 October 1791; most  
buildings were sold for different uses. Transformed into a barn, the  
abbey church was reopened in 1802 as the parish church.
Bouzonville was nearly suppressed during the Thirty Years' War,  
keeping only 20 houses at the end of the 17th century. It re-emerged in  
the 18th century, with the building of a town hall in 1719, increased  
in 1763. In 1789, the village had 330 households, that  
is c. 1,650 inhabitants.
The village was industrialized all along the 19th century, with the  
building of taneries, mills, cloth factories and a foundry (today the  
TRW factory, manufacturing disk brakes).
Severely damaged during the Second World War - 139 houses were  
destroyed, the bridge on the Nied was suppressed and the abbey church  
was hit -, the town was liberated by the American troops on 27  
November 1944.
A Jewish community settled in Bouzonville at the end of the 17th  
century; confirmed by Leopold's Decree in 1721, the community was  
formally registered in 1726. The community flourished in the 18th-19th  
centuries, with a sister community established in the neighboring  
village of Vaudreching. Built in the 19th century, the synagogue was  
revamped in 1907 and destroyed by the Germans in 1940; a new  
synagogue, built on the same site, was inaugurated on 13 November 1960.
Before the Second World War, the community was made of 40-50 families,  
living from trade, especially cattle trade. In 1940, the whole  
population of Bouzonville was evacuated to Chauvigny (Poitou). In spring 1944, the French Milice raided the Jews in Chauvigny; fourteen families from Bouzonville escaped arrestation with the help of Mayor  
Jacques Toulat and the gendarmes Camille Thibault and Alain Bonneau -  
the three of them are honoured as Righteous among the Nations in the  
Yad Vachem Memorial.
Ivan Sache, 6 March 2010
The flag of Bouzonville, as observed on 15 August 2009 in front of the Town Hall, is horizontally divided yellow-red-yellow (3:4:3) with a white fox in the red stripe and a red cross in the upper yellow stripe. The flag is a banner of the municipal arms, "Or on a fess gules a fox passant argent in chief a cross couped of the second".
The history and exact meaning  of the arms, supposed to have appeared in the 18th century, are unknown. While the cross clearly recalls the Holy Cross abbey, the  
meaning of the fox is a matter of speculation. It might recall that  
foxes are common in the area, a local legend, or, most probably, the  
nickname Füchse ([tricky] foxes) given to the inhabitants of  
Bouzonville.
Oddly enough, the arms of the Dukes of Lorraine, founders of the  
settlement, are not shown on the arms - but their colours, yellow and  
red, are - maybe not intentionally.
Pascal Vagnat & Ivan Sache, 6 March 2010