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PICARDY (La Picardie)

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 576 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PICARDY (La Picardie)  , one of the old provinces of France, bounded on the N. by Hainaut and
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Artois, on the E. by
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Champagne, on the S. by the Ile de France, and on the W. by
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Normandy and the
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English Channel . Its maritime frontier ran from the mouth of the Aa to the cliffs of Caux, and it included the whole of the basin of the
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Somme and
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part of that of the
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Oise . The chief towns of Picardy were
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Amiens, Boulogne,
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Abbeville,
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Laon,
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Soissons, Montreuil, Peronne,
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Beauvais,
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Montdidier, St Quentin and
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Noyon . Its
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principal rivers were the Somme and the Oise . Picardy formed part of the arch-diocese of Reims, and its bishoprics were Amiens, Beauvais, Senlis, Soissons, Noyon and Laon . In 1789 the province of Picardy was covered by the three bishoprics of Amiens, Noyon and Boulogne . It was one of the provinces of the five
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great fermes, districts subject to the tariff of 1664, and in judicial matters was under the authority of the parlement of Paris . Its
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area now forms the department of the Somme and parts of the departments of Pas de
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Calais,
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Aisne and Oise . The name of Picardy does not appear until the 13th century, but was employed by Matthew Paris and was in general use in the 14th century . In the 13th century the province was divided into the two bailliages of Amiens and
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Vermandois, but its
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regular organization as part of the
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kingdom of France only
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dates from the beginning of the 16th century . At this time it was divided into north and south Picardy . North Picardy, or Picardy proper, formed one of the great military governorships of the kingdom, while south Picardy was included in the Ile de France .

North Picardy was divided into upper and

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lower Picardy, the former being the interior part of the province and the latter the
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district along the coast . Upper Picardy comprised the districts of Amienois, Santerre, Vermandois and Thierache, and lower Picardy those of Ponthieu, Vimeu, Boulonnais and Calaisis, or the Pays reconquis; south Picardy included the districts of Beauvaisis, Laonnais and Soissonais . Under the Romans Picardy was part of Belgica secunda; it was inhabited by the Morini, the Ambiani, the Veromandui, the Bellovaci and the Suessiones, whose names still appear in Amiens, Vermandois, Beauvais and Soissons . The Romans intersected the district with roads and built several castra to defend the valley of the Somme . In the 3rd century
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Christianity was preached here, and St Quentin and others were martyred . A little later abbeys were founded, among them Corbie, St Valery and St Riquier . Early in the 5th century Picardy became the centre of Merovingian France, for, as the historian Michelet says, " 1'histoire de l'antique France semble entassee magne had his at Noyon, and Laon was the capital and the
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refuge of the later and feebler Carolingian sovereigns . During the later feudal period Picardy was the home of the
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counts of Vermandois, of Clermont and of Ponthieu, the sire of Coucy and others . The neighbouring dukes of
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Burgundy cast covetous eyes upon the province; in 1435, by the famous treaty of
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Arras, the royal towns and lands in the valley of the Somme were ceded by King Charles VII. to Burgundy . However, after the
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death of Charles the Bold in 1477 Picardy was finally'
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united with the
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crown of France . The province was early an
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industrial district . Flemish immigrants brought with them the lucrative trade of
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weaving
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cloth, and the Somme towns were soon competing with those of Flanders .

The

Picard towns were noted for their love of independence, which often brought them into collision with the kings of France during the 13th century . At a later time the province received a number of
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Spanish immigrants . In the
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middle ages the Picards formed one of the four " nations " at the university of Paris . Picardy has a high place as a home of
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Gothic
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art, this being testified to by the superb cathedrals at Amiens and Noyon, while within its
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borders is the famous chateau of Coucy . Picardy has a literature of its own, which was rich and popular in the 12th century . It suffered greatly from the ravages of the
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Normans, and later during the
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Hundred Years' War and the
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wars between France and Spain . Within it are the famous fields of Crecy, Agincourt and St Quentin, while it also includes places of
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conference like Gullies, Amiens and Picquigny . The Picard had a high reputation as a soldier, being sometimes called the " Gascon of the North," and in 1558 Henry II. created the regiment de Picardie . Many anthropological remains have been found in the Somme valley . See Labourt, Essai sur l'origine
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des villes de Picardie (Amiens, 1840) ; Grenier, Introduction a l'histoire generale de la province de Picardie (Amiens, 1856) ; and H . Carnoy, Litterature orale de la Picardie (1883) .

End of Article: PICARDY (La Picardie)
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