Online Encyclopedia

ARTOIS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 699 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ARTOIS  , an

ancient province of the north of France, corresponding to the
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present department of Pas de
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Calais, with the exclusion of the arrondissements of Boulogne and Montreuil, which belonged to Picardy . It is a rich and well-watered country, producing abundance of grain and hops, and yielding excellent pasture for cattle . The capital of the province was
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Arras, and the other important places were Saint-Omer, Bethune,
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Aire, Hesdin, Bapaume, Lens, Lillers, Saint-Pol and Saint-Venant . The name Artois (still more corrupted in " Arras ") is derived from the Atrebates, who possessed the
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district in the time of Caesar . From the 9th to the 12th century Artois belonged to the
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counts of Flanders . It was bestowed in 118o on Philip Augustus of France by Philip of Alsace, as the dowry of his niece Isabella of Hainaut . At her
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death in 11go, Baldwin IX., count of Flanders (d . 1206), and then his son-in-law, Ferrand (Ferdinand) of
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Portugal, count of Flanders, disputed the possession of the country with the king of France, Ferrand being in the coalition which was overthrown by Philip Augustus at
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Bouvines (1214) . In 1237 Artois, which was raised to a countship the following
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year, was conferred as an appanage by Saint Louis on his
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brother Robert, who died on crusade in 1250 . His son, Robert II., took
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part in the
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wars in Navarre, Sicily,
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Guienne and Flanders, and was killed at the
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battle of Courtrai in 1302 . After his death, his son Philip having predeceased him (1298), Artois was adjudged to his daughter Mahaut, or Matilda, as against her
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nephew Robert, son of Philip, who attempted to support his claim to the countship by forged titles . Banished from France for this crime (1322), Robert of Artois took
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refuge in England, where he became
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earl of Richmond, and incited
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Edward III. to make war upon Philip of Valois .

His descendants, the counts of Eu (q.v.), continued to

style themselves counts of Artois . By the
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marriage of Mahaut (d . 1329) with
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Otto IV., Artois passed to the house of
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Burgundy, in whose possession it remained till the marriage of Mary, the daughter of Charles the Bold, to the archduke Maximilian brought it to the house of Austria . Louis XI., however, occupied portions of Artois, and the claims of Austria were contested by France until the treaty of Senlis (1493) . The emperor Charles V. established the council of Artois, with
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sovereign authority . At the end of the
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Thirty Years' War Artois was again conquered by the French, and the
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conquest was ratified in the treaty of the Pyrenees (1659) by Spain, to whom the province had fallen in 1634 . During the war between France and Holland (1672–77) and that of the
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Spanish Succession, Artois was invaded again, but the
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treaties of Nijmwegen (1678) and of Utrecht (1713) confirmed the
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sovereignty of France . The title of count of Artois was borne by Charles X. of France before his accession to the
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throne . This new creation became
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extinct on the death of the comte de Chambord in 1883 .

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