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LIMOUSIN (Lat. Pagus Lemovicinus, age...

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 701 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LIMOUSIN (
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Lat. Pagus Lemovicinus, ager Lemovicensis, regio Lemovicum, Lemozinum, Limosinium, &c.)
  , a former province of France . In the time of
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Julius Caesar the pages Lemovicinus covered the county now comprised in the departments of Haute-Vienne,
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Correze and
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Creuse, with the arrondissements of
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Confolens in
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Charente and Nontron in
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Dordogne . These limits it retained until the loth century, and they survived in those of the diocese of
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Limoges (except a small
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part cut off in 1317 to form that of
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Tulle) until 1790 . The break-up into
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great fiefs in the loth century, however, tended rapidly to disintegrate the province, until at the close of the 12th century Limousin embraced only the viscounties of Limoges, Turenne and Comborn, with a few ecclesiastical lordships, corresponding roughly to the
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present arrondissements of Limoges and Saint Yrien in Haute-Vienne and part of the arrondissements of
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Brive, Tulle and Ussel in Correze . In the 17th century Limousin, thus constituted, had become no more than a small gouvernement . Limousin takes its name from the Lemovices, a Gallic tribe whose county was included by Augustus in the province of Aquitaiic Magna . Politically its
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history has little of
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separate
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interest; it shared in general the vicissitudes of
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Aquitaine, whose dukes from 918 onwards were its over-lords at least till 1264, after which it was sometimes under them, sometimes under the
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counts of
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Poitiers, until the French kings succeeded in asserting their
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direct over-lordship . It was, however, until the 14th century, the centre of a
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civilization of which the enamelling industry (see ENAMEL) was only one expression . The Limousin dialect, now a mere
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patois, was regarded by the troubadours as the purest form of Provencal . See A . Lerceux, Geographie et histoire du Limousin (Limoges, 1892) . Detailed bibliography in Chevalier, Repertoire
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des
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sources .

Topo-bibliogr . (

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Montbeliard, 1902), t. ii. s.v .

End of Article: LIMOUSIN (Lat. Pagus Lemovicinus, ager Lemovicensis, regio Lemovicum, Lemozinum, Limosinium, &c.)
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LIMOUSIN (or LIMOSIN), LEONARD (c. 1505-c. 1577)

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