Online Encyclopedia

MARMANDE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 744 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARMANDE  , a

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town of south-western France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of Lot-et-Garonne, 35 M . N.W. of
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Agen, on the
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Southern railway from
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Bordeaux to
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Cette . Pop . (1906), town 6373; commune, 9748 . Marmande is situated at the confluence of the Trec with the Garonne on the right
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bank of the latter
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river, which is here crossed by a suspension
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bridge . Public institutions include the sub-prefecture, the tribunals of first instance and commerce, the communal college and
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schools of commerce and industry and of agriculture . Apart fromthe administrative offices, the only
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building of importance is the church of Notre-Dame, which
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dates from the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries . The graceful windows of the
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nave, the altar-piece of the 18th century, and in particular, the Renaissance cloister adjoining the south side, are its most interesting features . Among the
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industries are iron-founding, steam sawing, the manufacture of woollens,
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carriage-making, cooperage and
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brandy-distilling . There is a large trade in wine, plums, cattle, grain and other agricultural produce . Marmande was a bastide founded about 1195 on the site of a more ancient town by Richard Coeur de Lion, who granted it a liberal measure of self-government . Its position on the banks of the Garonne made it an important place of toll .

It soon passed into the hands of the

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counts of Toulouse, and was three times besieged and taken during the Albigensian crusade, its capture by Amaury de Montfort in 1219 being followed by a
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massacre of the inhabitants . It was
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united to the French
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crown under Louis IX . A short occupation by the
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English in 1447, an unsuccessful siege by Henry IV. in 1577 and its resistance of a month to a division of Wellington's army in 1814, are the chief events in its subsequent
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history .

End of Article: MARMANDE
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XAVIER MARMIER (1809–1892)

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