Online Encyclopedia

ISSOIRE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 886 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ISSOIRE  , a

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town of central France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of
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Puy-de-Dome, on the Couze, near its junction with the Allier, 22 M . S.S.E. of Clermont-Ferrand on the Paris-Lyon-Mediterranee railway to Nimes . Pop . (1906) 5274 . Issoire is situated in the fertile plain of Limagne . The streets in the older
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part of the town are narrow and crooked, but in the newer part there are several
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fine tree-shaded promenades, while a handsome boulevard encircles the town . The church of St Paul or St Austremoine built on the site of an older
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chapel raised over the tomb of St Austremoine (Stremonius) affords an excellent specimen of the Romanesque architecture of
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Auvergne . Issoire is the seat of a sub-prefect; its public institutions include tribunals of first instance and commerce and a communal college .
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Brewing, wool-
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carding and the manufacture of passementerie, candles,
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straw hats and woollen goods are carried on . There is trade in lentils and other agricultural products, in fruit and in wine . Issoire (Iciodurum) is said to have been founded by the
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Arverni, and in
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Roman times rose to some reputation for its
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schools . In the 5th century the Christian community established there by Stremonius in the 3rd century was overthrown by the fury of the Vandals .

During the religious

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wars of the Reformation, Issoire suffered very severely . Merle, the leader of the Protestants, captured the town in 1574, and treated the inhabitants with
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great cruelty . The Roman Catholics retook it in 1577, and the ferocity of their
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retaliation may be inferred from the inscription "
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Ici fut Issoire " carved on a pillar which was raised on the site of the town . In the contest between the Leaguers and Henry IV., Issoire sustained further sieges, and never wholly regained its early prosperity .

End of Article: ISSOIRE
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