Online Encyclopedia

EVREUX

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 38 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EVREUX  , a

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town of north-western France, capital of the department of
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Eure, 67 m . W.N.W. of Paris on the Western railway to
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Cherbourg . Pop . (1906) town, 13,773; commune, 18,971 . Situated in the pleasant valley of the Iton, arms of which
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traverse it, the town, on the south, slopes up toward the public gardens and the railway station . It is the seat of a bishop, and its
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cathedral is one of the largest and finest in France .
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Part of the
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lower portion of the
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nave
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dates from the 11th century; the west
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facade with its two ungainly towers is, for the most part, the
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work of the
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late Renaissance, and various styles of the intervening period are represented in the rest of the church . A thorough restoration was completed in 1896 . The elaborate north transept and portal are in the flamboyant
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Gothic; the choir, the finest part of the interior, is in an earlier Gothic style . Cardinal de la Balue, bishop of Evreux in the latter
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half of the 15th century, constructed the octagonal central tower, with its elegant
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spire; to him is also due the Lady
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chapel, which is remark-able for some finely preserved stained glass . Two rose windows in the transepts and the carved wooden screens of the side chapels are masterpieces of 16th-century workmanship . The episcopal palace, a
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building of the 15th century, adjoins the south side of the cathedral .

An interesting

belfry, facing the handsome
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modern town hall, dates from the 15th century . The church of St Taurin, in part Romanesque, has a choir of the 14th century and other portions of later date; it contains the shrine of St Taurin, a work of the 13th century . At Vieil Evreux, 31 M. south-east of the town, the remains of a
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Roman theatre, a palace,
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baths and an aqueduct have been discovered, as well as various relics which are now deposited in the museum of Evreux . Evreux is the seat of a prefect, a court of assizes, of tribunals of first instance and commerce, a chamber of commerce and a board of trade arbitrators, and has a branch of the
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Bank of France, a lycee and training colleges for teachers . The making of
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ticking, boots and shoes, agricultural implements and
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gas motors, and metal-founding and
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bleaching are carried on . Vieil-Evreux (Mediolanum Aulercorum) was the capital of the Gallic tribe of the Aulerci Eburovices and a flourishing city during the Gallo-Roman period . Its bishopric dates from the 4th century . The first
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family of the
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counts of Evreux which is known was descended from an illegitimate son of Richard I., duke of
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Normandy, and became
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extinct in the male
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line with the
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death of Count William in 1118 . The countship passed in right of
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Agnes, William's
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sister, wife of Simon de Montfort-l'Amaury (d. ro87) to the house of the lords of Montfort-1'Amaury . Amaury III. of Montfort ceded it in 1200 to King Philip Augustus . Philip the
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Fair presented it (1307) to his
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brother Louis, for whose benefit Philip the Long raised the countship of Evreux into a peerage of France (1317) . Philip of Evreux, son of Louis, became king of Navarre by his
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marriage with Jeanne, daughter of Louis the Headstrong (Hutin), and their son Charles the
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Bad and their grandson Charles the Noble were also kings of Navarre .

The latter ceded his countships of Evreux,

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Champagne and Brie to King Charles VI . (1404) . In 1427 the countship of Evreux was bestowed by King Charles VII. on
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Sir John Stuart of Darnley (c . 1365-1429), the
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commander of his Scottish
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body-guard, who in 1423 had received the seigniory of Aubigny and in
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February 1427/8 was granted the right to quarter the royal arms of France for his victories over the
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English (see Lady Elizabeth Cust, Account of the Stuarts of Aubigny in France, 1422–1672,1891) . On Stuart's death (before Orleans during an attack on an English
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convoy) the countship reverted to the
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crown . It was again temporarily alienated (1569–1584) as an appanage for Francis, duke of
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Anjou, and in 1651 was finally made over to Frederic Maurice de la Tour d'
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Auvergne, duke of
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Bouillon, in
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exchange for the principality of
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Sedan .

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