Online Encyclopedia

PERIGUEUA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 150 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

PERIGUEUA  , a

See also:
town of south-western France, formerly capital of the old province of
See also:
Perigord, now chief town of the department of
See also:
Dordogne, 79 M . E.N.E. of
See also:
Bordeaux, on the railway between that city and
See also:
Limoges . Pop . (1906), 28,199 . The town, situated on an eminence on the right
See also:
bank of the Isle, is divided into three parts . On the slope of the hill is the
See also:
medieval town, bordered south-east by the
See also:
river and on the other three sides by esplanades and promenades; to the west is the
See also:
modern town, which stretches to the station; to the south of the modern town is the old
See also:
Roman town or cite, now traversed by the railway . Three bridges connect Perigueux with the
See also:
left bank of the Isle, where stood Vesunna, the capital of the Petrocorii . Hardly a trace of this old Gallic town remains, but not far off, on the Plateau de la Boissiere, the rampart of the old Roman camp can still be traced . On the right bank of the Isle, in the Roman city, there have been discovered some
See also:
baths of the 1st or 2nd century, supplied by an aqueduct four miles long, which spanned the Isle . A circular
See also:
building, called the " Tower of Vesunna," 68 ft. in diameter and 89 ft. in height, stands at what was formerly the centre of the city, where all the chief streets met It is believed to have been originally the
See also:
cella or main
See also:
part of a temple, probably dedicated to the tutelary deities of Vesunna . Of the amphitheatre there still remain huge fragments of wall and vaulting . The building had a diameter of 1312 ft., that of the arena being 87o ft.; and, judging from its construction, must be as old as the 3rd or even the 2nd century .

The

See also:
counts of Perigueux used it for their chateau, and lived in it from the 12th to the end of the 14th century . In 1644 it was given over by the town to the Order of the Visitation, and the sisters took from it the stones required for the construction of their nunnery . The most remarkable, however, of the ruins of the cite is the Chateau Barriere, an example of the fortified houses formerly
See also:
common there . Two of its towers date from the 3rd or 4th century, and formed part of the fortified enceinte; the highest tower is of the loth century; and the part now inhabited is of the 11th or 12th century, and was formerly used as a
See also:
burial
See also:
chapel . The bulk of the chateau is of the 12th, and some of the windows of the 16th century . The chief medieval building in the cite is the church of St Etienne, once the
See also:
cathedral . It
See also:
dates from the 11th and 12th centuries, but suffered much injury at the hands of the Protestants in the religious
See also:
wars when the tower and two of the three cupolas were destroyed . The choir and its cupola were skilfully restored in the 17th century . A
See also:
fine carved wooden reredos of the 17th century and a tomb of a bishop of the 12th century are to be seen in the interior . In the medieval town, known as Le
See also:
Puy-St-Front, the most remarkable building is the cathedral of St Front, which, till its restoration, or rather rebuilding, in the latter
See also:
half of the 19th century when the old features were to a
See also:
great extent lost, was of unique architectural value . It bears a striking resemblance to the
See also:
Byzantine churches and to St Mark's at Venice, and according to one theory was built from 984 to 1047, contemporaneously with the latter (977-1085) . It consists of five great cupolas, arranged in the form of a Greek
See also:
cross, and conspicuous from the outside .

The arms of the cross are 69 ft. in width, and the whole is 184 ft. long . These cupolas, 89 ft. high from the

See also:
keystone to the ground, are supported on a vaulted roof with pointed arches after the manner characteristic of Byzantine architecture . The pointed arches imitated from it prepared the way for the introduction of the
See also:
Gothic style . Adjoining St Front on the west are the remains of an old
See also:
basilica of the 6th century, above which rises the belfry, the only one in the Byzantine style now extant . It dates from the 11th century, and is composed of two massive cubes, placed the one above the other in retreat, with a circular
See also:
colonnade surmounted by a dome . To the south-west of St Front, the buildings of an old abbey (11th to 16th century) surround a cloister dating chiefly from the 13th century . Of the fortifications of Puy St Front, the chief relic is the Tour Mataguerre (14th century) . Perigueux is seat of a bishop, prefect and court of assizes, and has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, a chamber of commerce and a branch of the Bank of France . Its educational establishments include a lycee for boys, training colleges for both sexes and a school of
See also:
drawing . The trade of the town is in pigs, truffles,
See also:
flour,
See also:
brandy, poultry and pies known as
See also:
pales de Perigord . Vesunna was the capital of the Petrocorii, allies of Vercirigetorix when Caesar invaded Gaul . The country was afterwards occupied by the Romans, who built a second city of Vesunna on the right bank of the Isle opposite the site of the Gallic town .

The

barbarian invasion brought this prosperity to a close . St Front preached
See also:
Christianity here in the 4th century and over his tomb there was raised a monastery, which became the centre of the new town called Le Puy St Front . The cite was pillaged by the
See also:
Saracens about 731, and in 844 the
See also:
Normans devastated both quarters . The new town soon began to
See also:
rival the old city in importance, and it was not until 1240 that the attempts of the counts of Perigord and the bishops to infringe on their municipal privileges brought about a treaty of union . During the
See also:
Hundred Years' War, Perigueux was twice attacked by the
See also:
English, who took the cite in 1356; and the whole town was ceded to them by the Treaty of Bretigny, but returned to the French
See also:
Crown in the reign of Charles V . The county passed by
See also:
marriage into the hands of Anthony of Bourbon,
See also:
father of Henry IV., and was converted by the latter into royal domain . During the Huguenot wars Perigueux was frequentlya stronghold of the Calvinists,' who in 1575 did great destruction there, and it also suffered during the troubles of the
See also:
Fronde .

End of Article: PERIGUEUA
[back]
PERIGORD
[next]
PERIHELION (Gr. reg., near, titXLor, sun)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.