Online Encyclopedia

HENNEBONT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 272 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HENNEBONT  , a

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town of western France, in the department of
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Morbihan, 6m . N.E. of
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Lorient by road . Pop . (1906) 7250 . It is situated about to m. from the mouth of the Blavet, which divides it into two parts—the Ville Close, the
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medieval military town, and the Ville Neuve on the
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left
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bank and the Vieille Ville on the right bank . The Ville Close, surrounded by ramparts and entered by a massive gateway flanked by machicolated towers, consists of narrow quiet streets bordered by houses of the 16th and 17th centuries . The Ville Neuve, which lies nearer the
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river,
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developed during the 17th century and later than the Ville Close, while the Vieille Ville is older than either . The only
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building of architectural importance is the church of Notre-Dame de Paradis (16th century) preceded by a tower with an ornamented stone
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spire . There are scanty remains of the old fortress . Hennebont has a small but busy river-
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port accessible to vessels of 200 to 300 tons . An important foundry in the environs of the town employs 1400
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work-
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people in the manufacture of tin-
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plate for sardine boxes and other purposes . Boat-building, tanning, distilling and the manufacture of earthenware, white lead and chemical
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manures are also carried on .

Granite is worked in the neighbourhood . Hennebont is famed for the resistance which it made, under the widow of
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Jean de Montfort, when besieged in 1342 by the armies of Philip of Valois and Charles of
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Blois during the War of the Succession in
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Brittany (see BRITTANY) .

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PHILIPPE AUGUSTE HENNEQUIN (1763-1833)

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