Saint Ouen, Jersey

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Saint Ouën
Jersey parish
Cliffs at Plémont
Cliffs at Plémont
Coat of arms of Saint Ouën
Coat of arms
Location of Saint Ouën in Jersey
Location of Saint Ouën in Jersey
Crown Dependency Jersey, Channel Islands
Government[1]
 • Connétable Michael Paddock
Area
 • Total 15 km2 (6 sq mi)
Area rank Ranked 1st
Population (2011)[2]
 • Total 4,097
 • Density 270/km2 (710/sq mi)
Time zone GMT
 • Summer (DST) UTC+01 (UTC)
Postcode district JE3
Postcode sector 2

Saint Ouen (Jèrriais: Saint Ouën) is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey in the Channel Islands. It is in the north west of Jersey. The parish is the largest parish by surface area, covering 8,341 vergées (15 km²).

It is reputed to be the most traditional of the parishes, being the farthest from Saint Helier and with much of the territory of the parish forming a peninsula. Its manor, Saint Ouen's Manor, the seat of the de Carteret family for over eight centuries[citation needed] - is the senior fief in the island, and the influence of that family has also been a factor in the parish's independent-minded approach to its affairs.

Culture

File:Grosnez castle Jersey ruins.jpg
Ruins of Grosnez Castle
Prehistoric site of Le Pinacle

A number of the most influential writers of Jersey have been St. Ouennais. George F. Le Feuvre (1891–1984), who wrote under the pseudonym "George d'la Forge", was one of the most prolific authors of Jèrriais literature of the 20th century. Frank Le Maistre (1910–2002), compiler of the Dictionnaire Jersiais-Français (1966), did much to standardise the St. Ouennais dialect of Jèrriais as a literary language. Edward Le Brocq (1877–1964) wrote a weekly newspaper column from 1946 to 1964 recounting the lives and opinions of two St. Ouennais characters, Ph'lip and Merrienne.

The traditional nickname for St. Ouennais is Gris Ventres (grey bellies) - a reference to the custom of men from the parish to wear jerseys of undyed wool, which distinguished them from men from other parishes who generally wore blue.

A number of prehistoric sites are located in St. Ouen, including the dolmen des Monts Grantez, located at Le Chemin des Monts;[3] the dolmen des Geonnais;[4] and the prehistoric site at Le Pinacle,[5] which also contains one of the very few identifiable Gallo-Roman sites to be seen in Jersey, the foundations of a fanum (small temple).

Sark was recolonised by St Ouenais. Helier de Carteret, the seigneur of the parish, received a charter from Queen Elizabeth I to colonise Sark with 40 families from the parish on condition that he maintain the island free of pirates. Sercquiais is therefore a very old offshoot of St Ouennais Jèrriais. The St. Ouennais origins of Sercquiais can be seen in the 2nd and 3rd person plural forms of the preterite. Sercquiais uses an ending -dr which is typical of the St. Ouennais dialect of Jèrriais, but generally not used elsewhere in Jersey (nor nowadays by younger speakers in St. Ouen).

Sercquiais Jèrriais
(St. Ouennais)
standard Jèrriais English
i vuliidr i' voulîdrent i' voulîtent they wanted
uu paaliidr ou pâlîdres ou pâlîtes you spoke
i füüdr i' fûdrent i' fûtent they were
uu prẽẽdr ou prîndres ou prîntes you took

In the north west, the ruins of Grosnez Castle are a landmark which also features on the Jersey 50 pence coin (see coins of the Jersey pound).

The Island's racecourse is also to be found at Les Landes.

Demographics

Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1991 3,612 —    
1996 3,685 +2.0%
2001 3,803 +3.2%
2011 4,097 +7.7%

Cueillettes

Unlike the other parishes of Jersey, the subdivisions of this parish are not named vingtaines, but cueillettes (Jèrriais: tchilliettes). Vingteniers are still elected, however, in the cueillettes.

St. Ouen forms one electoral district and elects one Deputy.

Education

Les Landes School is a primary school, run by the States of Jersey, and located on La Rue des Cosnets, in Saint Ouen.[6]

Sport

Saint Ouen's local football team is St. Ouen F.C.[7]

Gallery

References

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External links

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