Online Encyclopedia

BEAUVAIS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 599 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BEAUVAIS  , a

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town of
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northern France, capital of the department of
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Oise, 49 M . N. by W. of Paris, on the Northern railway . Pop . (1906) 17,045 . Beauvais lies at the
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foot of wooded hills on the
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left
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bank of the Therain at its confluence with the Avelon . Its ancient ramparts have been destroyed, and it is now surroundedby boulevards, outside which run branches of the Therain . In addition, there are spacious promenades in the north-east of the town . Its
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cathedral of St
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Pierre, in some respects the most daring achievement of
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Gothic architecture, consists only of a transept and choir with apse and seven apse-chapels . The vaulting in the interior exceeds 150 ft. in height . The small Romanesque church of the loth century known as the Basse-(Euvre occupies the site destined for the
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nave . Begun in 1247, the
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work was interrupted in 1284 by the collapse of the vaulting of the choir, in 1573 by the fall of a too ambitious central tower, after which little addition was made . The transept was built from 1500 to 1548 .

Its facades, especially that on the

south, exhibit all the richness of the
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late Gothic style . The carved wooden doors of both the north and the south portals are master-pieces respectively of Gothic and Renaissance workmanship . The church possesses an elaborate astronomical
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clock (1866) and tapestries of the 15th and 17th centuries; but its chief
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artistic treasures are stained glass windows of the 13th, 14th and 16th centuries, the most beautiful of them from the hand of the Renaissance artist, Engrand Le Prince, a native of Beauvais . To him also is due some of the stained glass in St . Etienne, the second church of the town, and an interesting example of the transition stage between the Romanesque and Gothic styles . In the Place de 1'Hotel de Ville and in the old streets near the cathedral there are several houses dating from the 12th to the 16th centuries . The hotel de ville, close to which stands the statue of Jeanne Hachette (see below), was built in 1752 . The episcopal palace, now used as a court-house, was built in the 16th century, partly upon the Gallo-
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Roman fortifications . The industry of Beauvais comprises, besides the state manufacture of
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tapestry, which
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dates from 1664, the manufacture of various kinds of cotton and woollen goods, brushes, toys, boots and shoes, and bricks and tiles . Market-gardening flourishes in the vicinity and an extensive trade is carried on in grain and wine . The town is the seat of a bishop, a prefect and a court of assizes; it has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, together with a chamber of commerce, a branch of the Bank of France, a higher ecclesiastical seminary, a lycee and training colleges . Beauvais was known to the Romans as Caesaromagus, and took its
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present name from the Gallic tribe of the Bellovaci, whose capital it was .

In the 9th century it became a countship, which about 1013 passed to the bishops of Beauvais, who ultimately became peers of France . In 1346 the town had to defend itself against the

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English, who again besieged it in 1433• The siege _ which it suffered in 1472 at the hands of the duke of
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Burgundy was rendered famous by the heroism of the
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women, under the leadership of Jeanne Hachette, whose memory is still celebrated by a procession on the 14th of
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October (the feast of Ste Angadreme), in which the women take precedence of the men . See V . Lhuillier, Choses du vieux Beauvais et du Beauvaisis (1896) .

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