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ALPES MARITIMES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 723 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALPES MARITIMES  , a

department in the S.E. of France, formed in 1860 out of the county of
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Nice, to which were added the districts of Grasse (formerly in the department of the
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Var) and of Mentone (
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purchased from the prince of
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Monaco) . Pop . (1906) 334,007 . It is bounded N.E. and E. by Italy, S. by the Mediterranean Sea, and W. by the departments of the Var and the Basses Alpes, while its
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northern extremity forms a sharp angle between France and Italy . Its
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area is 1444 sq. m., its greatest length is 59 M. and its greatest breadth 481 m . It is composed of the valley of the Var
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river (which is all but completely within this department), together with those of its chief affluents, the Tinee and the Vesubie . The region of Grasse is hilly, but the rest of the department is mountainous, its loftiest point being the Mont Tinibras (9948 ft.) .at the head of the Tinee valley . Two singular features of the frontier of the department towards the east are only to be explained by
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historical reasons . One is that the central bit of the Roja valley is French, while the upper and
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lower bits of this valley are
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Italian; the reason is that those bits which are now Italian formed
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part of the county of Ventimiglia, and the central bit part of the county of Nice, which alone became French in 1860 . The result is that the Italians are now unable to build a railway from Cuneo by the Col de Tenda and down the Roja valley
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direct to Ventimiglia . The other strange feature is that from near Isola in the upper Tinee valley southwards the
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political frontier does not coincide with the
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physical frontier, or the main
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watershed of the Alpine chain; the reason (it is said) is that in 186o all the higher valleys of the Maritime
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Alps (on both sides of the watershed) were expressly excepted from the treaty of cession, in order that Victor Emmanuel II. might retain his right of
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chamois hunting in these parts . The department is divided into three arrondissements (Nice, Grasse and Puget Theniers), 27 cantons and 155 communes .

It forms the bishopric of Nice (the first

bishop certainly known-ALPHABET 7.2 3 is mentioned at the end of the 4th century), which till 1792 was in the ecclesiastical province of
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Embrun, then (1802) in that of
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Aix en Provence, next in that of Genoa (1814), and finally (1860) in that of Aix again . Its chief
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town is Nice . The broad-gauge
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railways in the department cover 56 m., including the
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line along the coast, while there are also 82 m. of narrow-gauge railways . The chief
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industries are distilleries for perfumes and manufacture of olive oil, of pottery and of tiles, besides a
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great commerce in cut flowers . To foreigners the department is best known for its
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health resorts, Nice,
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Cannes, Mentone,
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Antibes .and
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Beaulieu, while other important towns are Grasse and Puget Theniers . (W . A . B .

End of Article: ALPES MARITIMES
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