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MONTPELLIER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 789 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MONTPELLIER  , a

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town of
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southern France, capital of the department of
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Herault, about 7 M. from the Mediterranean, and 3r m . S.W. of Nimes on the Paris-Lyon railway between that town and
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Cette . Pop . (1906), 65,983 . Montpellier, the seat of a university and the
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principal place of
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lower
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Languedoc, is situated in a fruitful plain less than a mile from the right
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bank of the small
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river Lez . Composed for the most
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part of narrow winding streets, the town has at the same time several spacious thorough-fares and some
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fine squares and promenades, notably the much-frequented Place de la Comedie, the Esplanade and the Peyrou . The last terminates in a terrace commanding a magnificent view of the coasts of the Mediterranean, and of the Pyrenees and
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Alps . On the terrace is situated the
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reservoir of the town, the
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water being brought from a distance of about 8 m. by an aqueduct . In the centre of the square is an equestrian statue of Louis XIV., while opposite the entrance is the Porte de Peyrou, a triumphal arch erected at the end of the 17th century to commemorate the achievements of Louis XIV . The Boulevard
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Henri IV. to the north leads past the botanical garden, founded in 1593 and thus the
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oldest in France, the medical college, and the
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cathedral; to the east the Rue Nationale leads to the palace of justice, the prefecture, and the citadel . The cathedral (14th century), which until 1536 was the church of a
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Benedictine monastery, suffered severely during the religious
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wars, and about the
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middle of the 19th century the choir and one of the four towers at the angles of the
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nave were rebuilt in the style of the 13th century . The monastery, after being converted into the bishop's palace, has since 1795 been occupied by the famous medical school .

A

gallery devoted to the portraits of professors since 1239 contains one of Rabelais . Close to the medical school is the Tour
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des Pins, the chief relic of the
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medieval fortifications . The museum (Musee Fabre) contains rich collections of
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Italian, Flemish, Dutch and
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modern French paintings and -of French sculptures . Its nucleus was the collection given to it by the painter F . X . P . Fabre (1766-1837), born at Montpellier . The principal public buildings are the palace of justice—a modern structure, the theatre and the prefecture, also modern . Montpellier possesses old houses of the 15th and 16th centuries . The Lez is canalized so as to connect Montpellier with the canal du Midi and with the sea at Palavas . The town has a consider-able trade in wine,
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brandy, fruit and
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silk . The principal
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industrial establishment is a manufactory for candles and
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soap .

There are also tanneries, distilleries and manufactories of

cotton and woollen goods, chemicals, casks,
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hosiery and
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chocolate . The town is the centre of an academia (educational division) and has long been renowned as a seat of learning . Montpellier university comprises faculties of
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medicine, law, science and letters, and a higher school of
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pharmacy . Montpellier is also the seat of a bishop and a prefect, of courts of
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appeal and assizes, tribunals of first instance and of commerce, a chamber of commerce, a board of trade arbitration, and headquarters of the XVI. army corps . Montpellier first rose into importance after the destruction of Maguelonne by Charles Martel in 737 . In the loth century it consisted of two portions, Montpellier and Montpellieret, held from the bishops of Maguelonne by the
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family of Guilhem . The Guilhems were succeeded, through
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marriage, by the house of Aragon, a member of which in 1349 sold his rights to Philip of Valois, Montpellieret having already in 1292 been ceded to the
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Crown by the bishops . In 1141 Montpellier acquired a charter afterwards materially extended, and the same century saw the rise of its school of medicine . Several of the ablest teachers of that school were members of an important Jewish colony established in the town . It had a school of law in 116o, and a university was founded by Pope Nicholas IV. towards the close of the 13th century . Louis IX. granted to Montpellier the right of
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free trade with the whole of the
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kingdom, a
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privilege which greatly increased its prosperity . The importance of the town was enhanced when the bishopric of Maguelonne was transferred thither in 1536 .

During the wars of

religion the town was a stronghold of the Protestants, who captured it in 1567 . It strenuously supported the duke of Rohan in his revolts and in 1622 only succumbed to Louis XIII. after a siege of eight months . In 1628 the duke was defeated there and the walls of the town razed, the royal citadel built in 1624 being, however, spared . Louis XIII. made Montpellier the seat of one of the generalites of Languedoc, and the states of that province met there during the 17th and 18th centuries . See A . C . Germain, Histoire du commerce de Montpellier anterieurement a l'onverture du
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port de Cette (2 vols., Montpellier, 1861), and Histoire de la commune de Montpellier (3 vols., Montpellier, 1851); Aigrefeuille, Histoire de la ville de Montpellier (4 vols., Montpellier, 1875-1882) .

End of Article: MONTPELLIER
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ANNE MARIE LOUISE MONTPENSIER

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