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NEUCHATEL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 424 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NEUCHATEL  ,

capital of the above Swiss canton, situated near the north-east corner of the lake of Neuchatel . It is the meeting-point of several important railway lines, from Bern past Kerzers (27 m.), from Bienne (19 m.), from La Chaux de Fonds (19 m.), from
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Pontarlier (in France), by the Val de Travers, (331M.), and from Yverdon (23 m.) . The railway station (1575 ft.) at the top of the
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town is connected by an electric
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tramway with the
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shore of the lake some 150 ft.
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lower . The older portion of the town is built on the steep slope of the Chaumont, and originally the waters of the lake bathed the
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foot of the hill on which it stood . But the gradual growth of alluvial deposits, and more recently the artificial
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embankment of the shore of the lake, have added much dry ground, and on this site the finest
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modern buildings have been erected . The 16th-century castle and the 13th-century collegiate church of Notre Dame (now
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Protestant) stand 'close together and were founded in the 12th century when the
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counts took up their permanent residence in the town, to which they granted a charter of liberties in 1214 . Among the buildings on the quays are the Musee
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des Beaux Arts (modern Swiss paintings and also various
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historical collections, including that of Desor
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relating to the Lake Dwellings), the Gymnase or College Latin (in which is also the museum of natural
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history and the town library), the university (refounded in 1866 and raised from the rank of an academy to that of a university in 1909), the Ecole de Commerce and the
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post office . The town owes much to the gifts of citizens . Thus David de Parry (1709-1786) founded the town hospital and built the town hall, while James de Purry bequeathed to the town the
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villa in which the ethnographical museum has been installed (1904) . In 1811 J . L. de Pourtales (1722-1814) founded the hospital which bears his name, while in 1844 A. de Meuron (1789-1852) constructed the lunatic asylum at Prefargier, a few miles from the town . Among natives of the town are the theologians J .

F .

Ostervald (1663-1747) and Frederic Godet (1812-1900), the geologist E . Desor (1811-1882), the
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local historian G . A . Matile (1807-1881) and the politicians A . M . Piaget (1802-1870) and Numa Droz (1844-1899) . Neuchatel (partly because very good French is spoken there) attracts many
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foreign students, while the town is a
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literary centre . In 1900 Neuchatel numbered 20,843 inhabitants (in 185o only 7727 and in 1870, 12,683), 15,277 being French-speaking and 4553 German-speaking; there were 17,237 Protestants, 3459 Romanists and 8o Jews . (W . A . B .

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