Online Encyclopedia

BERRY, or BERRI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 809 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BERRY, or BERRI  , a former province of France, absorbed in 1790 in the departments of
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Cher, corresponding roughly with Haut-Berry, and
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Indre, representing Bas-Berry . George Sand, the most famous of " berrichon " writers, has described the quiet scenery and rural
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life of the province in the rustic novels of herlater life . Berry is the civitas or pagus Bituricensis of Gregory of
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Tours . The
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Bituriges were said by Livy (v . 34) to have been the dominating tribe in Gaul in the 7th century, one of their kings, Ambigat, having ruled over all Gaul . In Caesar's time they were dependent on the
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Aedui . The tribes inhabiting the districts of Berry and Bourbonnais were distinguished as Bituriges Cubi . The numerous menhirs and dolmens to be found in the
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district, to which
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local superstitions still cling, are probably monuments of still earlier inhabitants . In 52 B.C. the Bituriges, at the order of Vercingetorix, set fire to their towns, but spared
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Bourges (Avaricum) their capital, which was taken and sacked by the Romans . The province was amalgamated under Augustus with
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Aquitaine, and Bourges became the capital of Aquitania Prima . In 475 Berry came into the possession of the west Goths, from whom it was taken (c . 507) by Clovis .

The first

count of Berry, Chunibert (d . 763), was created by Waifer, duke of Aquitaine, from whom the county was wrested by Pippin the Short, who made it his residence and
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left it to his son Carloman, on whose
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death it fell to his
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brother Charlemagne . The countship of Berry was suppressed (926) by Rudolph, king of the Franks (fl . 923-936) . Berry was for some time a
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group of lordships dependent directly on the
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crown, but the chief authority eventually passed to the viscounts of Bourges, who, while owning the royal
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suzerainty, preserved a certain independence until 1101, when the viscount
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Odo Arpin de Dun sold his
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fief to the crown . Berry was
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part of the dowry of Eleanor, wife of Louis VII., and on her
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divorce and remarriage with Henry II. of England it passed to the
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English king . Its possession remained, however, a
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matter of dispute until 1200, when Berry reverted by treaty with John of England to Philip Augustus, and the various fiefs of Berry were given as a dowry to John's niece, Blanche of Castile, on her
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marriage with Philip's son Louis (afterwards Louis VIII.) . Philip Augustus established an effective control over the administration of the province by the appointment of a royal bailli . Berry suffered during the
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Hundred Years' War, and more severely during the
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wars of religion in the 16th century . It had been made a duchy in 1360, and its first duke, John [
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Jean] (1340-1416), son of the French king John II., encouraged the arts and beautified the province with
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money wrung from his government of
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Languedoc . Thence-forward it was held as an apanage of the French crown, usually by a member of the royal
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family closely related to the king . Charles of France (1447-1472), brother of Louis XI., was duke of Berry, but was deprived of this province, as subsequently of the duchies of
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Normandy and
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Guienne, for intrigues against his brother .

The duchy was also governed by Jeanne de

Valois (d . 1505), the repudiated wife of Louis XII.'; by
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Marguerite d'Angouleme, afterwards queen of Navarre; by Marguerite de Valois, afterwards duchess of Savoy; and by Louise of
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Lorraine, widow of Henry III., after whose death (1601) the province was finally reabsorbed in the royal domain . The title of duke of Berry, divested of territorial significance, was held by princes of the royal house . Charles (1686-1714), duke of Berry, grandson of Louis XIV., and third son of the dauphin Louis (d . 1711), married
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Marie Louise Elisabeth (1686-1714), eldest daughter of the duke of Orleans, whose intrigues made her notorious . The last to bear the title of duke of Berry was the
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ill-fated Charles Ferdinand, grandson and heir of Charles X .

End of Article: BERRY, or BERRI
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ANTOINE PIERRE BERRYER (179o-1868)

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