Online Encyclopedia

CHEFFONIER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 23 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHEFFONIER  , properly CHIFFONIER, a piece of

furniture differentiated from the
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sideboard by its smaller
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size and by the enclosure of the whole of the front by doors . Its name (which comes from the French for a rag-gatherer) suggests that it was originally intended as a receptacle for odds and ends which had no place elsewhere, but it now usually serves the purpose of a sideboard . It is a remote and illegitimate descendant of the
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cabinet; it has rarely been elegant and never beautiful . It was one of the many curious developments of the mixed taste, at once cumbrous and bizarre, which prevailed in furniture during the
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Empire period in England . The earliest cheffoniers date from that time; they are usually of rosewood—the favourite
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timber of that moment; their " furniture " (the technical name for knobs, handles and escutcheons) was most commonly of brass, and there was very often a raised shelf with a pierced brass gallery at the back . The doors were well panelled and often edged with brass-beading, while the feet were pads or claws, or, in the choicer examples, sphinxes in gilded
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bronze . Cheffoniers are still made in England in cheap forms and in
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great number . CHEH-KIANG, an eastern province of
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China, bounded N. by the province of Kiang-su, E. by the sea, S. by the province of Fu-kien, and W. by the provinces of Kiang-si and Ngan-hui . It occupies an
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area of about 36,000 sq. m., and contains a population of 11,800,000 . With the exception of a small portion of the great delta plain, which extends across the frontier from the province of Kiang-su, and in which are situated the famous cities of Hu Chow, Ka-hing, Hang-chow, Shao-Sing and Ning-po, the province forms a portion of the Nan-shan of south-eastern China, and is hilly throughout . The Nan-shan ranges run through the centre of the province from south-west to north-east, and
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divide it into a
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northern portion, the greater
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part of which is drained by the Tsien-tang-kiang, and a
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southern portion which is chiefly occupied by the Ta-chi basin . The valleys enclosed between the mountain ranges are numerous, fertile, and for the most part of exquisite beauty .

The hilly portion of the province furnishes large supplies of

tea, and in the plain which extends along the coast, north of Ning-po, a great quantity of
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silk is produced . In minerals the province is poor .
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Coal and iron are occasionally met with, and traces of copper ore are to be found in places, but none of these minerals exists in sufficiently large deposits to make
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mining remunerative . The province, however, produces cotton, rice, ground-nuts, wheat, indigo, tallow and beans in abundance . The
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principal cities are Hang-chow, which is famed for the beauty of its surroundings, Ning-po, which has been frequented by
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foreign
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ships ever since the Portuguese visited it in the 16th century, and Wenchow . Opposite Ning-po, at a distance of about 50 m., lies the island of
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Chusan, the largest of a
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group bearing that general name . This island is n m. long, and about 50 M. in circumference . It is very mountainous, and is surrounded by numerous islands and islets . On its south side stands the walled
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town of Ting-hai, in front of which is the principal harbour . The population is returned as 50,000 .

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