Matran is first mentioned in 1123 as
Martrans. It is then mentioned in 1138 under the name Martrens en Nuithonie. Later it changed to Martrans (1148), Matrans (1157), Martranz (1285), Martrant (1445), Martrand (1555) and Matrang (1668). The place name derives from "Martyrus". In the Middle Ages the
Abbey of Payerne owned much land in Matran. In 1442 the hamlet was sold and came into possession of
Fribourg. After the collapse of the
Ancien Régime (1798) Matran belonged, during the
Helvetic Republic and later, to the county of Fribourg. In 1848 it became a member of the Saane District of the Canton of Fribourg. Matran has grown from a sleepy hamlet of a few hundred farmers and their families to a population of over 1,000 inhabitants in the last 25 years. Matran boasts a wonderful
gothic parish church dating back to the 16th century with rare 18th-century ceiling paintings depicting the 4 evangelists by an unknown artist, and a gigantic bronze
Pieta by Hugo de Matran at the town mortuary. The town is dominated by the former Kollegium Sankt Joseph, once a boarding school run by the
Redemptorist Fathers (C. Ss. R.), which since the early 1990 serves a spiritual retreat for groups. The chapel is frequently used for broadcasts by the TV de la Suisse Romande. ==Geography==