Online Encyclopedia

DREUX

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 578 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DREUX  , a

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town of north-western France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of
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Eure-et-Loir, 27 M . N.N.W. of
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Chartres by
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rail . Pop . (1906) 8209 . It is situated on the Blaise, which at this point divides into several arms . It is overlooked from the north by an eminence on which stands a ruined
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medieval castle; within the enclosure of this
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building is a gorgeous
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chapel, begun in 1816 by the dowager duchess of Orleans, and completed and adorned at
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great cost by Louis Philippe . It contains the tombs of the Orleans
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family, chief among them that of Louis Philippe, whose remains were removed from England to Dreux in 1876 . The sculptures on the tombs and the stained glass of the chapel windows are masterpieces of
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modern
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art . The older of the two hotels-de-ville of Dreux was built in the early 16th century, chiefly by Clement Metezau, the founder of a famous family of architects, natives of the town . It is notable both for the graceful carvings of the
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facade and for the
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fine
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staircase and architectural details of the interior . The church of St
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Pierre, which is
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Gothic in style, contains good stained glass and other
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works of art . The town has a statue of the poet
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Jean de Rotrou, born there in 1609 .

Dreux is the seat of a subprefect . Among the public institutions are tribunals of first instance and of

commerce, and a communal college . The manufacture of boots and shoes, metal-founding and tanning, are carried on, and there is trade in wheat and other agricultural products and poultry . Dreux was the capital of the Gallic tribe of the Durocasses . In 1188 it was taken and burnt by the
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English; and in 1562 Gaspard de Coligny, and Louis I., prince of Conde, were defeated in its vicinity by Anne de Montmorency and Francis, duke of Guise . In 1593 Henry IV. captured the town after a fortnight's siege . It was occupied by the Germans on the 9th of
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October 187o, was subsequently evacuated, and was again taken, on the 17th of November, by General Von Tresckow . In the loth century Dreux was the chief town of a countship, which
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Odo, count of Chartres, ceded to king Robert, and Louis VI. gave to his son Robert, whose grandson Peter of Dreux, younger
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brother of Count Robert III., became duke of
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Brittany by his
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marriage with Alix, daughter of Constance of Brittany by her second
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husband Guy of
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Thouars . By the marriage of the countess Jeanne II. with Louis, viscount of Thouars (d . 1370), the Capetian countship of Dreux passed into the Thouars family . In 1377 and 1378, however, two of the three co-heiresses of Jeanne, Perronelle and
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Marguerite, sold their shares of the countship to King Charles V . Charles VI. gave it to Arnaud Amanien d'
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Albret, but took it back in order to give it to his brother Louis of Orleans (1407); later he gave it back to the lords of Albret .

Francis of

Cleves laid claim to it in the 16th century as heir of the d'Albrets of Orval, but the parlement of Paris declared the countship to be
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crown
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property . It was given to Catherine de' Medici (1539), then .to Francis, duke of Alengon (1568); it was pledged to Charles de Bourbon, count of
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Soissons, and through him passed to the houses of Orleans, Vendome and Conde .

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