Caunette-sur-Lauquet is a very small administrative commune in southern France. It lies in the Aude department and the larger administrative region of Occitanie. As a local municipal entity the settlement is officially a commune, part of the French system of lowest-tier local government. Nationally, it is situated within France and more specifically in the department of Aude, which belongs to the region referenced above.
Location and administrative context
The village takes its name from its position on or near the Lauquet watercourse and sits within the rural landscape of Aude. Administratively it is recorded among the communes of the department and is subject to the regional structures of Occitanie. Like other small communes it typically relies on intercommunal cooperation for many public services and planning functions.
Population and character
Caunette-sur-Lauquet is notable for its extremely low population: official figures recorded four inhabitants in 2017. Such a small population indicates a predominantly rural and quiet environment with very limited local services. Buildings commonly found in small French communes — a mairie (town hall), a small church, farmhouses and secondary residences — are typical, although the precise local footprint is modest.
History and landscape
While detailed local history for this specific commune is concise in public records, the area shares the wider heritage of Aude: long-settled countryside with medieval routes, agricultural land and traces of Occitan culture. The place name reflects its geographic setting beside the Lauquet and fits the pattern of small settlements that developed around watercourses and fields.
Importance and notable facts
- Population: recorded as four people in 2017, making it one of the least populous communes in the département.
- Rural character: part of the agricultural and natural landscape of Aude and Occitanie.
- Administrative status: a formal commune within the French local government framework.
Because of its size, Caunette-sur-Lauquet illustrates the persistence of France's many small communes and the demographic challenges of rural areas. For administrative, historical or demographic inquiries consult departmental and regional sources or local municipal records via the appropriate authorities.