The inhabitants of the commune are known as Arbotiar.[4][5]
Geography
Arbouet-Sussaute is located in the former province of Lower Navarre some 30 km south-east of Peyrehorade and 5 km north-east of Saint-Palais. The D933 road from Saint-Palais in the south-west passes north through the western part of the commune and continues to Osserain-Rivareyte. Access to the village is by the D134 road from the D29 in the north passing south through the village and the commune and continuing south to join the D11 just west of Domezain-Berraute. The intercity bus network of Pyrénées-Atlantiques currently has a stop on its route 865 which goes from Saint-Palais to Orthez. There is also the hamlet of Sussaute to the south-east of the village. A disused line of railway passes from the north to the south-west through the commune.[6]
Located in the Drainage basin of the Adour, the commune is traversed 3 by tributaries of the Bidouze: the Ruisseau de Récalde and the Lauhirasse and its tributary the Berd.
The commune name in basque is Arboti-Zohota.[3][8]
According to Jean-Baptiste Orpustan Arboti is the spelling preserved in basque but the meaning is uncertain. If it is from the Latin (borrowed from arbor(e)), the name may signify a wooded place. For Zohota (Sussaute) he suggests a basque origin of zozoeta meaning "Place of blackbirds".[9]
The following table details the origins of the commune name and other names in the commune.
The fiscal census of 1412–1413,[19] made[20] on the orders of Charles III of Navarre, compared with the census of men and weapons that are in this Kingdom of Navarre below the ports in 1551[21] reveals a demography with strong growth. The first indicated the presence in Arbouet of 12 fires, the second with 31 (24 + 7 secondary fires). Similarly in Sussaute, the census of 1412-1413 had 7 fires while that of 1551 had 23 (19 + 4 side lights).
The census of the population of Lower Navarre in 1695[22] counted 52 fires in Arbouet and 50 in Sussaute.
In 2017 the commune had 322 inhabitants. The population data given in the table and graph below include the former commune of Sussaute, absorbed in 1842.
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1793
615
—
1800
559
−1.35%
1806
593
+0.99%
1821
572
−0.24%
1831
568
−0.07%
1836
554
−0.50%
1841
530
−0.88%
1846
510
−0.77%
1851
522
+0.47%
1856
479
−1.70%
1861
495
+0.66%
1866
504
+0.36%
1872
475
−0.98%
1876
461
−0.75%
1881
654
+7.24%
1886
502
−5.15%
1891
480
−0.89%
1896
444
−1.55%
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1901
437
−0.32%
1906
477
+1.77%
1911
479
+0.08%
1921
415
−1.42%
1926
373
−2.11%
1931
342
−1.72%
1936
335
−0.41%
1946
368
+0.94%
1954
337
−1.09%
1962
320
−0.64%
1968
324
+0.21%
1975
293
−1.43%
1982
289
−0.20%
1990
252
−1.70%
1999
227
−1.15%
2007
253
+1.36%
2012
296
+3.19%
2017
322
+1.70%
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
^Jean-Baptiste Orpustan, Collective work, Amikuze - the Mixe Country, Éditions Izpegi, 1992, ISBN2 909262 05 7, page 77 (in French)
^Census cited by Manex Goyhenetche in his General History of Basque Country - Vol. 3, Elkarlanean, 2001, ISBN2 9131 5634 7, page 26. The same work by Manex Goyhenetche indicated (page 284) that there were an average of 5.5 inhabitants per fire. (in French)
^Transcribed and published by Ricardo Cierbide, Censos de población de la Baja Navarra, Max Niemeyer Verlag, Tübingen, 1993 (in Spanish)
^Departmental Archives of Pyrénées-Atlantiques, E 575, transcribed by Louis Baratchart in The Friends of old Navarre, January 1995, pages 44-54 (in French)
^Bibliothèque nationale, 6956, Moreau register 979, cited by Manex Goyhenetche in General History of Basque Country - Vol. 3, Elkarlanean, 2001, ISBN2 9131 5634 7, page 299. (in French)