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PAU

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 938 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PAU  , a

city of south-western France, chief
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town of the department of Basses-Pyrenees, 66 m . E.S.E. of
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Bayonne on the
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southern railway to Toulouse . Pop . (1906), 30,315 . It is situated on the border of a plateau 130 ft. above the right
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bank of the Gave de Pau (a
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left-hand affluent of the Adbur), at a height of about 62o ft. above the sea . A small stream, the Hedas, flowing in a deep
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ravine and crossed by several bridges, divides the city into two parts . The
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modern importance of Pau is due to its
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climate, which makes it a
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great winter
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health-resort . The most striking characteristic is the stillness of the air, resulting from the peculiarly sheltered situation . The
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average rainfall is about 33 in., and the mean winter temperature is 430, the mean for the
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year being 56° . The town is built on a sandy
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soil, with the streets
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running east and west . The Place Royale (in the centre of which stands Nicolas Bernard Raggi's statue of Henry IV., with bas-reliefs by Antoine Etex) is admired for the view over the valley of the Gave and the Pyrenees; it is connected by the magnificent Boulevard
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des Pyrenees with the castle gardens . Beyond the castle a park of
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thirty acres planted with
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beech trees stretches along the high bank of the Gave .

Access to the castle is obtained by a stone
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bridge built under Louis XV.; this leads to the entrance, which gives into a courtyard . On the left of the entrance is the donjon or tour de Gaston Phoebus . On the right are the tour neuve, a modern erection, and the Tour de Montauzet (
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Monte-Oiseau), the higher storeys of which were reached by ladders; the Tour de Bilheres faces north-west, the
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Tours de Mazeres south-west . Another tower between the castle and the Gave, the Tour de la Monnaie, is in ruins . In the gardens to the west of the castle stand a statue of Gaston Phoebus, count of
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Foix, and two porphyry vases presented by Bernadotte king of Sweden, who was born at Pau . On the ground-floor is the old hall of the estates of Beam, 85 ft. long and 36 ft. wide, adorned with a white marble statue of Henry IV., and magnificent Flemish tapestries ordered by Francis I . Several of the upper chambers are adorned with Flemish, Brussels or Gobelins
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tapestry, but the most interesting
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room is that in which Henry IV. is said to have been born, containing his cradle made of a
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tortoise-shell, and a magnificent carved bed of the time of Louis XII . The churches of St Jacques and St Martin in the
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Gothic style are both modern . The lycee occupies a portion of the buildings of a Jesuit college founded in 1622 . The prefecture, the law-court and the hotel de
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vine
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present no remarkable features . Pau is the seat of a court of
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appeal and a court of assizes and has a tribunal of first instance, a tribunal of commerce and a chamber of arts and manufactures . There are training colleges for both sexes, a library, an
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art museum and several learned societies .

Pau owes most of its prosperity to its visitors . The

golf club, established 1856, has a course of 18 holes, on the Plaine de Billere, about a mile from the town . Among the
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industrial establishments are
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flour-mills,
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cloth factories and tanneries, and there is trade in wine, hams, horses and cloth . Pau derives its name from the word pal, in allusion to the stakes which were set up on the site chosen for the town . It was founded probably at the beginning of the 1th century by the viscounts of Beam . By the erection of the present castle in the latter
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half of the 14th century, Gaston Phoebus made the town a place of importance and after his
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death the viscounts of Beam visited it frequently . Gaston IV. granted a charter to the town in 1464 . Francois Phoebus, grandson and successor of Gaston, became king of Navarre in 1479, and it was not until 1512 that the loss of
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Spanish Navarre caused the rulers of Beam to transfer their residence from Pampeluna to Pau, which till 1589 was their seat of government . Margaret of Valois, who married
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Henri d'
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Albret, made her court one of the most brilliant of the time . In 1553 her daughter Jeanne d'Albret gave birth to Henry IV. at Pau . It was the residence of Catherine,
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sister of Henry IV., who governed Beam in the name of her
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brother . In 1620when French Navarre and Bears were reduced to the rank of province, the intendants took up their quarters there .

In the 19th century Abd-el-Kader, during

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part of his captivity, resided in the castle .

End of Article: PAU
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