Online Encyclopedia

DOLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 387 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

DOLE  , a

See also:
town of eastern France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of Jura, 29 M . S.E. of
See also:
Dijon on the Paris-Lyon railway . Pop . (1906) 11,166 . It occupies the slope of a hill over-looking the
See also:
forest of Chaux, on the right
See also:
bank of the
See also:
Doubs, and of the canal from the Rhone to the Rhine which accompanies that
See also:
river . The streets, which in general are steep and narrow, contain many old houses recalling, in their architecture, the
See also:
Spanish occupation of the town . The
See also:
principal buildings are the church of Notre Dame, a
See also:
Gothic structure of the 16th century; the college,, once a . Jesuit establishment, which contains the library and a museum of paintings and has a
See also:
chapel of the Renaissance period; the Hotel-Dieu and hotel de vide, both 17th-century buildings; and the law court occupying an old convent of the Cordeliers . In the courtyard of the hotel de
See also:
vine there stands an old tower dating from the 15th century . The birth of Louis Pasteur (1822) in the town is commemorated by a monument, and there is also a monument to Jules Grevy . Dole is the seat of a sub-prefect and has tribunals of first instance and of commerce and a communal college . Metal-founding and the manufacture of fire-pumps, kitchen-ranges and other iron goods, chemical products, machinery, leather,
See also:
liqueurs and pastry, are among the
See also:
industries .

There is a

good trade in agricultural produce and live stock, and in wood, iron,
See also:
coal and the stone of the vicinity . Wine is largely grown in the
See also:
district . Dole, the ancient Dola, was in
See also:
Roman times the meeting place of several roads, and considerable remains have been found there; in the later
See also:
middle ages and till 1648 it was the capital of Franche Comte and seat of a parlement and a university; but in the
See also:
year 1479 the town was taken by the forces of Louis XI., and so completely sacked that only the house of
See also:
Jean Vurry, as it is still called, and two other buildings were
See also:
left
See also:
standing . It subsequently came into the hands of Maximilian of Austria, and in 1530 was fortified by Charles V . In 1668 and 1674 it was captured by the French and lost its parlement and its university, both of which were transferred by Louis XIV. to
See also:
Besancon .

End of Article: DOLE
[back]
DOLDRUMS (a slang term, dol = dull; cf. tantrum)
[next]
DOLE (from Old Eng. dal, cf. mod. " deal ")

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.