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BEAUNE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 598 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BEAUNE  , a

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town of eastern France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of Cote-d'Or, on the Bouzoise, 23 M . S.S.W. of
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Dijon on the main
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line of the Paris-Lyon railway . Pop . (1906) 11,668 . Beaune lies at the
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foot of the hills of Coted'Or . Portions of its ancient fortifications are still to be seen, but they have been for the most
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part replaced by a shady
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promenade which separates the town from its suburbs . The most interesting feature of Beaune is the old hospital of St Esprit, founded in 1443 by Nicolas Rolin, chancellor of
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Burgundy . Though it is built largely of wood, the fabric is in good preservation . The exterior is
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simple, but the buildings which surround the main courtyard have high-pitched
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roofs surmounted by numerous dormer windows with decorated gables, recalling the Flemish style of architecture . In the interior there are several interesting apartments; the chief of these is the ample council chamber with its
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fine tapestries, where an. import-ant wine sale is held annually . The hospital possesses many
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artistic treasures, among them the mural paintings of the 17th century in the Salle St Hugues and an altar-piece, the Last
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Judgment, attributed to Roger
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van der Weyden . The
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principal church of the town, Notre-Dame, dating mainly from the 12th and 13th centuries, has a fine central tower and a triple portal with handsome wooden doors .

In the interior there is some valuable

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tapestry of the 15th century, and other
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works of
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art . Two round towers (15th century) are a survival of the castle of Beaune, dismantled by Henry IV . A belfry of 1403 and several houses of the Renaissance period, some of which are built over ancient wine-cellars, are architecturally notable . There is a statue to the mathematician, G . Monge, born in the town (1746), and a monument to
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Pierre Joigneaux the politician (d . 1892) . Beaune has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, a chamber of commerce, a school of agriculture and viticulture and colleges for girls and boys . It carries on considerable trade in live-stock and cereals and in the vegetables of its market-gardens, and manufactures of casks, corks, white metal, oil,
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vinegar and machinery for the wine-trade are included among the
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industries; it is chiefly important for its vineyards and as the centre of the wine-trade of Burgundy . Beaune was a fortified
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Roman camp and a stronghold during the
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middle ages . It was the capital of a
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separate county which in 1227 was
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united to the duchy of Burgundy; it then became the first seat of the Burgundian parlement or fours generaux and a ducal residence . On the
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death of Charles the Bold, it sided with his daughter, Mary of Burgundy, but was besieged and taken by the forces of Louis XI. in 1478 . Its rank as commune, conceded to it in 1203, was confirmed by Francis I. in 1521 .

In the

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Wars of Religion it at first sided with the
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League, but afterwards opened its gates to the troops of Henry IV., from whom it received the confirmation of its communal privileges and permission to demolish its fortifications . The revocation of the edict of Nantes struck a severe blow at the
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cloth and iron industries, which had previously been a source of prosperity to the town . In the 18th century there were no fewer than seven monastic buildings in Beaune, besides a Bernardine abbey, a Carthusian convent and an ecclesiastical college .

End of Article: BEAUNE
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MARQUIS DE BEAUREGARD (c. 1772–?)

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