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CLAMECY , a See also: town of central See also: France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of See also: Nievre, at the confluence of the See also: Yonne and Beuvron and on the Canal du Nivernais, 46 m
.
N.N.E. of See also: Nevers on the See also: Paris-Lyon railway
.
Pop
.
(1906) 4455• Its See also: principal See also: building is the See also: church of St
See also: Martin, which
See also: dates chiefly from the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries
.
The tower and See also: facade are of the 16th century
.
The See also: chevet, which is surrounded by an See also: aisle, is rectangular—a feature found in few French churches
.
Of the old See also: castle of the See also: counts of Nevers, vaulted cellars alone remain
.
A church in the suburb of See also: Bethlehem, dating from the 12th and 13th centuries, now serves as See also: part of an hotel
.
The public institutions include the sub-prefecture, tribunals of first instance and of commerce and a communal See also: college
.
Among the See also: industrial establishments are saw-mills, fulling-mills and See also: flour-mills, tanneries and manufactories of boots and shoes and chemicals; and there is considerable See also: trade in See also: wine and cattle and in See also: wood and See also: charcoal, which is conveyed principally to Paris, by way of the Yonne
.
In the early See also: middle ages Clamecy belonged to the abbey of St Julian at See also: Auxerre; in the rrth century it passed to the counts of Nevers, one of whom, Herve, enfranchised the inhabitants in 1213
.
After the capture of Jerusalem by Saladin in 1188, Clamecy became the seat of the bishops of Bethlehem, who till the Revolution resided in the hospital of Panthenor, bequeathed by See also: William IV., count of Nevers
.
On the coup d'etat of 1851 an insurrection broke out in the town, and was repressed by the new authorities withSee also: great severity
.
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