Online Encyclopedia

FECAMP

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 231 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

FECAMP  , a seaport and bathing resort of

See also:
northern France, in the department of Seine-Inferieure, 28 m . N.N.E. of Havre on the Western railway . Pop . (1906) 15,872 . The
See also:
town, which is situated on the
See also:
English Channel at the mouth of the small
See also:
river Fecamp, consists almost entirely of one street upwards of 2 M. in length . It occupies the bottom and sides of a narrow valley opening out towards the sea between high cliffs . The most important
See also:
building is the abbey church of La Trinite, dating for the most
See also:
part from 1175 to 1225 . The central tower and the south portal (13th century) are the chief features of its
See also:
simple exterior; in the interior, the decorative
See also:
work, notably the
See also:
chapel-screens and some
See also:
fine stained glass, is remarkable . The hotel-de-ville with a municipal museum and library occupy the remains of the abbey buildings (18th century) . The church of St Etienne With century) and the
See also:
Benedictine liqueur distillery,' a
See also:
modern building which also contains a museum, are of some
See also:
interest . A tribunal and chamber of commerce, a board of trade-arbitrators and a nautical school, are among the public institutions . The
See also:
port consists of an entrance channel nearly 400 yds. long leading to a tidal harbour and docks capable of receiving
See also:
ships
See also:
drawing 26 ft. at spring-tide, 19 ft. at
See also:
neap-tide .

Fishing for

herring and
See also:
mackerel is carried on and the town equips a large
See also:
fleet for the codbanks of
See also:
Newfoundland and Iceland . The chief exports are oil-cake, flint,
See also:
cod and Benedictine liqueur . Imports include
See also:
coal,
See also:
timber,
See also:
tar and hemp . Steam sawing, metal-founding, fish-salting,
See also:
shipbuilding and repairing, and the manufacture of
See also:
ship's-biscuits and fishing-nets are among the
See also:
industries . The town of Fecamp grew up round the nunnery founded in 658 to guard the relic of the True
See also:
Blood which, according to the legend, was found in the trunk of a fig-tree drifted from
See also:
Palestine to this spot, and which still remains the most precious treasure of the church . The
See also:
original convent was destroyed by the North-men, but was re-established by Duke William Longsword as a house of canons
See also:
regular, which shortly afterwards was converted into a Benedictine monastery . King Richard I. greatly enlarged this, and rebuilt the church . The town achieved some prosperity under the dukes of
See also:
Normandy, who improved its harbour, but after the annexation of Normandy to France it was overshadowed by the rising port of Havre .

End of Article: FECAMP
[back]
ALEXANDRE FEBVRE
[next]
GUSTAV THEODOR FECHNER (1801-1887)

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.