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DAUPHINE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 851 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DAUPHINE  , one of the old provinces (the name being still in current use in the

country) of pre-Revolutionary France, in the south-east portion of France, between Provence and Savoy; since 1790 it forms the departments of the Isere, the
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DrOme and the Hautes Alpes . After the
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death of the last king of
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Burgundy, Rudolf III., in 1032, the territories known later as Dauphine (as
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part of his
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realm) reverted to the far-distant emperor . Much confusion followed, out of which the
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counts of Albon (between
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Valence and Vienne) gradually came to the front . The first dynasty ended in 1162 with Guigue V., whose daughter and heiress,
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Beatrice, carried the possessions of her house to her
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husband,
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Hugh III., duke of Burgundy . Their son, Andre, continued the
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race, this second dynasty making many territorial acquisitions, among them (by
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marriage) the Embrunais and the Gapencais in 1232 . In 1282 the second dynasty ended in another heiress, Anna, who carried all to her husband, Humbert, lord of La Tour du Pin (between Lyons and
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Grenoble) . The title of the chief of the house was Count (later Dauphin) of the Viennois, not of Dauphine . (For the origin of the terms Dauphin and Dauphine see DAUPHIN.) Humbert II . (1333–1349), grandson of the heiress Anna, was the last
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independent Dauphin, selling his dominions in 1349 to Charles of Valois, who on his accession to the
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throne of France as Charles V. bestowed Dauphine on his eldest son, and the title was borne by all succeeding eldest sons of the kings of France . In 1422 the Diois and the
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Valentinois, by the will of the last count, passed to the eldest son of Charles VI., and in 1424 were annexed to the Dauphine . Louis (1440-1461), later Louis XI. of France, was the last Dauphin who occupied a semi-independent position, Dauphine being annexed to the
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crown in 1456 . The
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suzerainty of the emperor (who in 1378 had named the Dauphin " Imperial Vicar " within Dauphine and Provence) gradually died out .

In the 16th

century the names of the reformer Guillaume Farel (1489–1565) and of the duke of Lesdiguieres (1543–1626) are prominent in Dauphine
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history . The " States " of Dauphine (dating from about the
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middle of the 14th century) were suspended by Louis XIII. in 1628, but their unauthorized meeting (on the 21st of
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July 1788) in the tennis court (Salle du Jeu de Paume) of the castle of Vizille, near Grenoble, was one of the earliest premonitory signs of the
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great French Revolution of 1789 . It was at Laffrey, near Grenoble, that
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Napoleon (March 7th, 1815) was first acclaimed by his old soldiers sent to arrest him .

End of Article: DAUPHINE
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