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CHAMONIX

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 827 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHAMONIX  , a

mountain valley in south-east France, its chief
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village, of the same name, being the capital of a canton of the arrondissement of Bonneville in the department of Haute-
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Savoie . The valley runs from N.E. to S.W., and is watered by the Arve, which rises in the Mer de Glace . On the S.E. towers the snowclad chain of Mont Blanc, and on the N.W.the less lofty, but rugged chain of the Brevent and of the Aiguilles Rouges . Near the head of the valley is the village of Argentiere (4101 ft.), which is connected with
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Switzerland by " char " (
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light
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carriage) roads over the The Noire and past Salvan, and by a mule path over the Col de Balme, which joins the Tete Noire route near Trient and then crosses by a " char " road the Col de la Forclaz to Martigny in the Rhone valley . The
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principal village, Chamonix (3416 ft.), is 6 m. below Argentiere by electric railway (which continues via Finhaut to Martigny) and is visited annually by a
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host of tourists, as it is the best starting-point for the exploration of the glaciers of the Mont Blanc chain, as well as for the ascent of Mont Blanc itself . It is connected with Geneva by a railway (55 m.) . In 1906 the population of the village was 8o6, of the commune 3482 . The valley is first heard of about 1091, when it was granted by the count of the Genevois to the
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great
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Benedictine house of St Michel de la Cluse, near
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Turin, which by the early 13th century established a priory therein . But in 1786 the inhabitants bought their freedom from the canons of Sallanches, to whom the priory had been transferred in 1519 . In 1530 the inhabitants obtained from the count of the Genevois the
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privilege of holding two fairs a
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year, while the valley was often visited by the
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civil officials and by the bishops of Geneva (first recorded visit in 1411, while St Francis de Sales came thither in 16o6) . But travellers for pleasure were long rare . The first party to publish (1744) an account of their visit was that of Dr R .

Pococke, Mr W . Windham and other Englishmen who visited the Mer de Glace in 1741 . In 1742 came P . Martel and several other Genevese, in 176o H . B. de Saussure, and rather later Bourrit . See J . A . Bonnefoy and A . Perrin, Le Prieure de Chamonix (2 vols.,
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Chambery, 1879 and 1883) ; A . Perrin, Histoire de la vallee et du prieure de Chamonix (Chambery, 1887) ; L . Kurz and X . Imfeld, Carte de la chine du Mont Blanc (1896; new ed., 19o5); L .

Kurz, Climbers'

Guide to the Chain of Mont Blanc (
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London, 1892) ; also
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works referred to under BLANC, MoNT . (W . A . B .

End of Article: CHAMONIX
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