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See also: France
.
In the See also: time of See also: Julius Caesar the pages Lemovicinus covered the county now comprised in the departments of Haute-See also: Vienne, See also: Correze and See also: Creuse, with the arrondissements of See also: Confolens in See also: Charente and Nontron in See also: Dordogne
.
These limits it retained until the loth century, and they survived in those of the diocese of See also: Limoges (except a small See also: part cut off in 1317 to See also: form that of See also: Tulle) until 1790
.
The break-up into See also: great fiefs in the loth century, however, tended rapidly to disintegrate the province, until at the close of the 12th century See also: Limousin embraced only the viscounties of Limoges, See also: Turenne and Comborn, with a few ecclesiastical lordships, corresponding roughly to the See also: present arrondissements of Limoges and See also: Saint Yrien in Haute-Vienne and part of the arrondissements of See also: 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 See also: Augustus in the province of Aquitaiic Magna
.
Politically its See also: history has little of See also: separate See also: interest; it shared in general the vicissitudes of See also: Aquitaine, whose See also: dukes from 918 onwards were its over-lords at least till 1264, after which it was sometimes under them, sometimes under the See also: counts of See also: Poitiers, until the French See also: kings succeeded in asserting their See also: direct over-lordship
.
It was, however, until the 14th century, the centre of a See also: civilization of which the enamelling industry (see ENAMEL) was only one expression
.
The Limousin dialect, now a See also: mere See also: 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 See also: des See also: sources
.
Topo-bibliogr . ( See also: Montbeliard, 1902), t. ii. s.v
.
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