Online Encyclopedia

LAUSANNE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 289 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

LAUSANNE  , the

capital of the Swiss canton of Vaud . It is the junction of the railway lines from Geneva, from
See also:
Brieg and the Simplon, from Fribourg and Bern, and from Vallorbe (for Paris) . A funicular railway connects the upper
See also:
town with the central railway station and with Ouchy, the
See also:
port of Lausanne on the lake of Geneva . Lausanne takes its name from the Flon stream flowing through it, which was formerly called Laus (
See also:
water) . The older or upper portion of the town is built on the crest and slopes of five hillocks and in the hollows between them, all forming
See also:
part of the Jorat range . It has a picturesque appearance from the
See also:
surface of the lake, above which the
See also:
cathedral rises some 500 ft., while from the town there is a
See also:
fine view across the lake towards the mountains of Savoy and of the Valais . The quaint characteristics of the hilly site of the old town have largely been destroyed by
See also:
modern improvements, which began in 1836 and were not quite completed in 1910 . The
See also:
Grand Pont, designed by the cantonal engineer, Adrien Pichard (1790-1841), was built 1839–1844, while the Barre tunnel was pierced 1851–1855 and the
See also:
bridge of Chauderon was built in 1905 . The valleys and
See also:
lower portions of the town were gradually filled up so as to form a series of squares, of which those of Riponne and of St Francois are the finest, the latter now being the real centre of the town . The
See also:
railways were built between 1856 and 1862, while the opening of the Simplon tunnel (1906) greatly increased the commercial importance of Lausanne, which is now on the
See also:
great international
See also:
highway from Paris to Milan . From 1896 onwards a well-planned set of tramways within the town was constructed . The town is still rapidly extending, especially towards the south and west .

Since the days of

Gibbon (
See also:
resident here for three periods, 1753-1758, 1763–1764 and 1783–1793), whose praises of the town have been often repeated, Lausanne has become a favourite place of residence for foreigners (including many
See also:
English), who are especially attracted by the excellent establishments for secondary and higher
See also:
education . Hence in 2900 there were 9501
See also:
foreign residents (of whom 628 were
See also:
British subjects) out of a
See also:
total population of 46,732 inhabitants; in 1905 it was reckoned that these numbers had risen respectivelyto 10,625, 818 and 53577• In 1709 it is said that the inhabitants numbered but 7432 and 9965 in 1803, while the numbers were 20,515 in 186o and 33,340 in 1888 . Of the population in 1900 the great majority was French-speaking (only 6627 German-speaking and 3146
See also:
Italian-speaking) and
See also:
Protestant (9364 Romanists and 473 Jews) . The
See also:
principal
See also:
building is the cathedral church (now Protestant) of Notre Dame, which with the castle occupies the highest position . It is the finest
See also:
medieval ecclesiastical building in
See also:
Switzerland . Earlier buildings were more or less completely destroyed by fire, but the
See also:
present edifice was consecrated in 1275 by Pope Gregory X. in the presence of the emperor Rudolf of Habsburg . It was sacked after the Bernese
See also:
conquest (1536) and the introduction of Protestantism, but many ancient tapestries and other precious
See also:
objects are still preserved in the
See also:
Historical Museum at Bern . The church was well restored at great cost from 1873 onwards, as it is the great pride of the citizens . Close by is the castle, built in the early 15th century by the bishops, later the residence of the Bernese bailiffs and now the seat of the various branches of the administration of the canton of Vaud . Near both is the splendid Palais de Rumine (on the Place de la Riponne), opened in 1906 and now
See also:
housing the university as well as the cantonal library, the cantonal picture gallery (or Musee Arlaud, founded 1841) and the cantonal collections of archaeology, natural
See also:
history, &c . The university was raised to that rank in 1890, but, as an academy,
See also:
dates from 1537• Among its former teachers may be mentioned Theodore Beza, Conrad Gesner, J . P. de Crousaz, Charles Monnard, Alexandre Vinet,
See also:
Eugene Rambert, Juste Olivier and several members of the Secretan
See also:
family .

On the Montbenon heights to the south-west of the cathedral

See also:
group is the federal palace of justice, the seat (since 1886) of the federal court of justice, which, erected by the federal constitution of 29th May 1874, was fixed at Lausanne by a federal
See also:
resolution of 26th
See also:
June 1874 . The house, La Grotte, which Gibbon inhabited 1783–1793 and on the terrace of which he completed (1787) his famous history, was demolished in 1896 to make
See also:
room for the new
See also:
post office that stands on the Place St Francois . The asylum for the blind was mainly founded (1845) by the generosity of W . Haldimand, an Englishman of Swiss descent . The first
See also:
book printed in Lausanne was the
See also:
missal of the cathedral church (1493), while the
See also:
Gazette de Lausanne (founded 1798) took that name in 1804 . Lausanne has been the birthplace of many distinguished men, such as Benjamin Constant, the Secretans, Vinet and Rambert . It is the seat of many benevolent, scientific and
See also:
literary societies and establishments . The
See also:
original town (mentioned in the Antonine Itinerary) was on the
See also:
shore of the lake, near Vidy, south-west of the present city . It was burnt in the 4th century by the Alamanni . Some of the inhabitants took
See also:
refuge in the hills above and. there founded a new town, which acquired more importance when Bishop Marius about 590 chose it as his see city (perhaps transferring it from Avenches) . Here rose the cathedral church, the bishop's palace, &c . Across the Flon was a Burgundian settlement, later known as the Bourg, while to the west was a third colony around the church of St Laurent .

These three elements joined together to form the present city . The bishops obtained little by little great temporal

powers (the diocese extended to the
See also:
left
See also:
bank of the
See also:
Aar) and riches, becoming in 1125 princes of the
See also:
empire, while their chapter was recruited only from the noblest families . But in 1368 the bishop was forced to recognize various liberties and customs that had been gradually won by the citizens, the Plaid General of that
See also:
year showing that there was already some kind of municipal government, save for the cite, which was not
See also:
united with the vale inferieure or the other four quartiers (Bourg, St Laurent, La Palud and Le Pont) in 1481 . In 1525 the city made an
See also:
alliance with Bern and Fribourg . But in 1536 the territory of the bishop (as well as the Savoyard
See also:
barony of Vaud) was forcibly conquered by the Bernese, who at once introduced Protestantism . The Bernese occupation lasted till 1798, though in 1723 an attempt was made to put an end to it by Major Davel, who lost his
See also:
life in consequence . In 1798 Lausanne became a
See also:
simple prefecture of the canton Leman of the Helvetic republic . But in 1803, on the creation of the canton of Vaud by the Act of Mediation, it became its capital . The bishop of Lausanne resided after 1663 at Fribourg, while from 1821 onwards he added " and of Geneva ",to his title . Besides the general
See also:
works dealing with the canton of Vaud (q.v.), the following books refer specially to Lausanne: A . Bennis, L'Imprimerie a Lausanne et a Morges jusqu'a la f i n du e6`a siecle (Lausanne, 1904) ; M . Besson, Recherches sur
See also:
les origines
See also:
des
See also:
eve"ches de Geneve, Lausanne, Sion (Fribourg, 1906) ; A .

Bonnard, " Lausanne au 181eme siecle," in the

See also:
work entitled Chez nos aleux (Lausanne, 1902) ; E . Dupraz, La Cathedrale de Lausanne . etude historique (Lausanne, 1906) ; E . Gibbon, Autobiography and Letters (3 vols., 1896) ; F . Gingins and F . Forel, Documents concernant l'ancien eveche de Lausanne, 2 parts (Lausanne, 1846-1847); J . H . Lewis and F . Gribble, Lausanne (1909); E.
See also:
van Muyden and others, Lausanne d travers les ages (Lausanne, 1906) ; Meredith Read, Historic Studies in Vaud, Berne and Savoy (2 vols., 1897) ; M . Schmitt, Memoires hist. sur le diocese de Lausanne (2 vols., Fribourg, 1859) ; J . Stammler (afterwards bishop of Lausanne), Le Tresor de la cathedrale de Lausanne (Lausanne, 1902 ; trans. of a German book of 1894) . (W . A .

B .

End of Article: LAUSANNE
[back]
LARVIK LAURVIK
[next]
LAUT

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.