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DOUBS , a frontier department of easternSee also: France, formed in 1790 of the See also: ancient principality of See also: Montbeliard and of See also: part of the province of Franche-Comte
.
It is bounded E. and S.E. by See also: Switzerland, N. by the territory of Belfort and by Haute See also: Saone, and W. and S.W. by See also: Jura
.
Pop
.
(1906) 298,438
.
See also: Area, 2030 sq. m
.
The department takes its name from the See also: river Doubs, by which it is traversed
.
Between the Ognon, which forms the See also: north-western limit of the department, and the Doubs, runs a range of low hills known as " the plain." The rest of Doubs is mountainous, four parallel chains of the Jura See also: crossing it from N.E. to S.W
.
The Lomont range, the lowest of these chains, dominates the See also: left See also: bank of the Doubs
.
The central region is occupied by hilly plateaux covered with pasturage and forests, while the rest of the department is traversed by the remaining three See also: mountain ranges, the highest and most easterly of which contains the Mont d'Or (480o ft.), the culminating point of Doubs
.
Besides the Doubs the chief See also: rivers are its tributaries, the Dessoubre, watering the See also: east of the department, and the Loue, which traverses its See also: south-western portion
.
The See also: climate is in general cold and See also: rainy, and the winters are severe
.
The See also: soil is stony and loamy, and at the higher levels there are numerous peat-bogs
.
Approximately a fifth of the See also: total area is planted with cereals; more than a third is occupied by pasture
.
In its agricultural aspect the department may be divided into three regions
.
The highest, on which the snow usually lies from six to eight months in the See also: year, is in part barren, but on its less exposed slopes is occupied by forests of See also: fir
A Ykt•
Large iron foundries are found at Audincourt (pop
.
S317) and other towns
.
The See also: distillation of See also: brandy and See also: absinthe, and the manufacture of See also: cotton and woollen goods, automobiles and paper,, are also carried on
.
Exports include watches, live-stock,, See also: wine, vegetables, iron and hardware; cattle, hides, See also: timber, See also: coal, wine and machinery are imported
.
Large quantities of goods, in transit between France and Switzerland, pass through the department
.
Among its See also: mineral products are See also: building See also: stone and lime, and there are peat workings
.
Doubs is served by the
See also: Paris-Lyon railway, the See also: line from Dole to Switzerland passing, via See also: Pontarlier, through the south of the department
.
The canal from the Rhone to the Rhine traverses it for 84 See also: miles
.
The department is divided into the arrondissements of See also: Besancon, See also: Baume-See also: les-Dames, Montbeliard and Pontarlier, with 27 cantons and 637 communes
.
It belongs to, the academie (educational circumscription) and the diocese of Besancon, which is the capital, the seat of an archbishop and of a See also: court of See also: appeal, and headquarters of the VII. army corps
.
Besides Besancon the chief towns are Montbeliard and Pontarlier (qq.v.) . Ornans,.a See also: town on the Loue, has a See also: church of the 16th century and ruins of a feudal
See also: castle, which are of antiquarian See also: interest
.
Montbenoit on the Doubs near Pontarlier has the remains of an Augustine abbey (13th to 16th centuries)
.
The cloisters are of the 15th century, and the church contains, among other See also: works of See also: art, some See also: fine stalls executed in the 16th century
.
See also: Lower down the Doubs is the town of Morteau, with the Maison Pertuisier, a See also: house of the See also: Renaissance See also: period, and a church which still preserves remains of a previous structure of the 13th century
.
Baume-les-Dames owes the affix of its name to a See also: Benedictine convent founded in 763, to which only See also: noble ladies were admitted
.
Numerous antiquities have been found at Mandeure (near Montbeliard), which stands on the site of the See also: Roman town of Epom,anduodurum
.
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