Montsalvy (; ) is a commune in the Cantal department in south-central France.
History
Montsalvy was founded around 1070 as a
monastery with a
Sauveté, (a refuge zone around a church or a chapel by several boundary markers) by
Bérenger de Millau, husband of Adèle de Carlat.
Formerly the "capital" of the Veinazès region, it was for a long time the chief town of the Canton de Montsalvy. Today it is part of the canton of Arpajon-sur-Cère and is the second largest commune in terms of population.
Population
See also
-
Communes of the Cantal department
Culture
Literature
Montsalvy appears in the following works:
-
Juliette Benzoni, French author (Alexandre Dumas Prix 1973) who wrote and set her Catherine (Benzoni novel) series historical romance in Montsalvy.
Notable person
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Marcellin Boule (1861–1942), palaeontologist, geologist, and anthropologist, was born and died in Montsalvy.