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NANTES , a city of westernSee also: France, capital of the department of See also: Loire-Inferieure, on the right See also: bank of the Loire, 35 M. above its mouth, at the junction of the See also: Orleans, Western and
See also: State See also: railways, S5 M
.
W.S.W. of See also: Angers by See also: rail
.
In population (See also: town, 118,244; commune, 133,247, in 1906) Nantes is the first city of See also: Brittany
.
The Loire here divides into several branches forming islands over portions of which the city has spread
.
It receives on the See also: left See also: hand the Sevre Nantaise, and on the right the Erdre, which forms the outlet of the canal between Nantes and See also: Brest
.
The maritime See also: port of Nantes is reached by way of' the Loire and the See also: ship canal between the See also: island of Carnet and La Martiniere (9a m.)
.
Vessels See also: drawing as much as 20 ft
.
8 in., and at spring tides, 22 ft., can reach the port, which extends over a length of about 11 m
.
The See also: outer port as far as the See also: industrial suburb of Chantenay has a length of over See also: half a mile
.
The See also: principal quays extend along the right bank of the branch which flows past the town, and on the western See also: shore of the island of Gloriette
.
Their See also: total length used for trading purposes is 5 m., and warehouses cover an See also: area of 17 acres
.
A slipway facilitates the repairing of See also: ships
.
The See also: river port occupies the St Felix and Madeleine branches, and has quays extending for half a mile
.
Finally, on the Erdre is a third port for inland navigation
.
The quays are bounded by railway lines along the right bank of the river, which the railway to St Nazaire follows
.
The older quarter of Nantes containing the more interesting buildings is situated to the See also: east of the Erdre
.
The See also: cathedral, begun in 1434 in the See also: Gothic See also: style, was unfinished till the 19th century when the transept and choir were added
.
There are two interesting monuments in the transept—on the right Michel See also: Colomb's See also: tomb of See also: Francis II., duke of Brittany, and his second wife See also: Marguerite de See also: Foix (1507), and on the left that of General Juchault de Lamoriciere, a native of Nantes, by See also: Paul See also: Dubois (1879)
.
Of the other churches the most interesting is St Nicolas, a See also: modern See also: building in the style of the 13th century, on the right bank of the Erdre
.
Between the cathedral and the Loire, from which it is separated only by the breadth of the quay, stands the See also: castle of Nantes, founded in the gth or loth century
.
Rebuilt by Francis II. and the duchess See also: Anne, it is flanked by huge towers and -by a bastion erected by See also: Philip
See also: Emmanuel duke of Mercceur in the See also: time of the See also: League
.
A See also: fine See also: facade in the Gothic style looks into the courtyard
.
From being the residence of the See also: dukes of Brittany, the castle became a state prison in which See also: Jean-Frangois Paul de Gondi, See also: Cardinal de Retz, See also: Nicholas Fouquet, and See also: Marie Louise of Naples, duchess of See also: Berry, were at different times confined; it is now occupied as the artillery headquarters
.
The See also: chapel in which the See also: marriage of See also: Louis XII. with Anne of Brittany was celebrated was destroyed by an
See also: explosion in 'Soo
.
The See also: Exchange (containing the tribunal and chamber of commerce), the See also: Grand Theatre, the Prefecture and the town See also: hall are buildings of the last half of the 18th or early 19th century; the
See also: law courts date from the See also: middle of the 19th century
.
Nantes has an archaeological collection in the See also: Dobree Museum, and in the museum of fine arts a splendidcollection of paintings, modern French masters being well represented; it also has a natural See also: history museum, a large library See also: rich in See also: manuscripts and a botanical garden to the east
.
The Pommeraye Passage, which connects streets on different levels and is built in stages connected by staircases, See also: dates from 1843
.
Between the Loire and the Erdre run the Cours St See also: Pierre and the Cours St See also: Andre, adorned at the two ends of the See also: line by statues of Anne of Brittany and Arthur III., Bertrand du Guesclin and See also: Olivier de Clisson, and separated by the Place Louis XVI., with a statue of that monarch on a lofty See also: column
.
The Place Royale, to the west of the Erdre, the See also: great meeting-place of the principal thoroughfares of the city, contains a monumental fountain with allegorical statues of Nantes and the Loire and its affluents
.
A See also: flight of steps at the west end of the town leads up from the quay to the See also: colossal cast-iron statue of St Anne, whence a splendid view may be obtained over the valley of the Loire
.
Several old houses of the 15th and 16th centuries, the See also: fish market and the Salorges (a vast granite building now used as a bonded warehouse) are of See also: interest
.
Nantes has two great hospitals—St Jacques on the left bank of the Loire, and the Hotel-Dieu in Gloriette Island
.
It is the seat of a bishopric and a See also: court of assizes, and headquarters of the XI. army corps; it has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, a See also: board of See also: trade-arbitrators, a chamber of commerce and a branch of the Bank of France
.
The educational institutions include lycees for both sexes, a training See also: college for girls. See also: schools of See also: medicine and See also: pharmacy and law, a preparatory school to higher instruction, science and letters, schools of See also: music, See also: art and navigation, technical and commercial schools, and a school for See also: deaf-mutes and the See also: blind
.
Among the more important See also: industries of Nantes are See also: sugar-refining, See also: flour-milling, See also: rice-husking, the manufacture of oil, See also: soap, flour pastes and biscuits, and the preparation of tinned provisions (sardines, vegetables, &c.); the manufacture of tin boxes, tiles, chemical See also: manures, acid from See also: chestnut bark, See also: tobacco, See also: leather, See also: wood-pulp for paper, rope, boots and shoes, brushes and See also: glass; saw-milling, See also: shipbuilding, See also: metal founding and the construction of See also: engineering material; and wool and See also: cotton-spinning and the manufacture of cotton and other fabrics, See also: hosiery and knitted goods
.
See also: Coal and patent fuel (chiefly from Great Britain) are the most important imports; next come See also: phosphates and See also: pyrites; other imports are See also: timber and pulp-wood
.
The principal exports are bunker-coal (to French colonies), pyrites, slate, hoops and provisions . In the ten years 1898-1907 theSee also: average See also: annual value of the imports was £2,657,000; of the exports £795,000
.
In 1907 there entered from See also: foreign countries 738 vessels (209 See also: British) with See also: tonnage of 584,850, and cleared 778 with 154,720 tons of cargo, and 458,538 tons of ballast
.
Reckoning ships carrying cargo only the figures for the first and last years of the See also: decade 1898-1907 were: 1898, ships entered, French 209 (tonnage 75,249), foreign 250 (tonnage 154,936); ships cleared, French 173 (tonnage 32,591), foreign 97 (tonnage 27,836): 1907, ships entered, French 186 (tonnage 127,635), foreign 419 (tonnage 361,002); ships cleared, French 126 (tonnage 81,299), foreign 128 (tonnage 45,181)
.
Before the See also: Roman occupation Nantes was the chief town of the Namnetes and consisted of Condovicnum, lying on the hills away from the river, and of See also: Portus Namnetum, on the river
.
Under the See also: Romans it became a great commercial and administrative centre, though its two parts did not coalesce till the 3rd or 4th century
.
In the middle of the 3rd century See also: Christianity was introduced by St Clair
.
See also: Clotaire I. got possession of the city in 56o, and placed it under the See also: government of St Felix the See also: bishop, who executed enormous See also: works to cause the Loire to flow under the walls of the castle
.
After being several times subdued by Charlemagne, Brittany revolted under his successors, and Nominoe, proclaimed See also: king in 842, ordered the fortifications of Nantes to be razed because it had sided with
See also: Charles the Bald
.
The
See also: Normans held the town from 843 to 936
.
About this time began the rivalry between Nantes and See also: Rennes, whose See also: counts disputed the See also: sovereignty of Brittany
.
Pierre de See also: Dreux, declared duke of Brittany by Philip See also: Augustus, made Nantes his capital,
surrounded it with fortifications and defended it valiantly against See also: John of
See also: England
.
During the See also: Breton See also: wars of succession Nantes took See also: part first with Jean de Montfort, but afterwards with Charles of See also: Blois, and did not open its See also: gates to Monfort till his success was assured and his See also: English See also: allies had retired
.
In 156o Francis II. granted Nantes a communal constitution
.
In the course of the 15th and 16th centuries the city suffered from several epidemics
.
Averse to Protestantism, it joined the League along with the duke of Mercceur, governor of Brittany, who helped to raise the country into an See also: independent duchy; and it was not till 1598 that it opened its gates to See also: Henry IV., who here signed on the 2nd of May of that
See also: year the famous Edict of Nantes which until its revocation by Louis XIV. in 1685 was the charter of Huguenot liberties in France
.
It was at Nantes that Henry de Talleyrand, count of Chalais, was punished in 1626 for plotting against See also: Richelieu, that Fouquet was arrested in 1661, and that the Cellamare conspirators were executed under the See also: regent Philip of Orleans
.
Having warmly embraced the cause of the Revolution in 1789, the city was in 1793 treated with extreme rigour by J
.
B
.
Carrier, See also: envoy of the Committee of Public Safety, whose noyades or wholesale drownings of prisoners became notorious
.
Nantes on more than one occasion vigorously resisted the Vendeans
.
It was here that the duchess of Berry was arrested in 1832 while trying to stir up La See also: Vendee against Louis Philippe
.
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