Online Encyclopedia

SARTHE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 224 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SARTHE  , a

department of north-western France, formed in 1790 out of the eastern
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part of Maine, and portions of
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Anjou and of
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Perche . Pop . (1906) 421,470 .
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Area 2410 sq. m . It is bounded N. by the department of
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Orne, N.E. by
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Eure-et-Loir, E. by Loir-et-
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Cher, S. by
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Indre-et-
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Loire and Maine-et-Loire and W. by 1Vlayenne . The Sarthe, a sub-tributary of the Loire, flows in a south-
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westerly direction through the department; and the Loire, which along with the Sarthe joins the Mayenne to form the Maine above
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Angers, traverses its
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southern
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borders . Broken and elevated country is found in the north and east of the department, which elsewhere is low and undulating . The highest point (on the boundary towards Orne) is 1115 ft . The Sarthe flows past Le Mans and Sable, receiving the Merdereau and the Vegre from the right, and the Orne Saosnoise and the Huisne from the
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left . The Loir passes La Fleche, and along its chalky banks caves have been hollowed out which, like those along the Cher and the Loire, serve as dwelling-houses and stores . The mean
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annual temperature is 51° to 52° Fahr . The rainfall is between 25 and 26 in .

The

majority of the inhabitants live by agriculture . There are three distinct districts:—the corn lands to the north of the Sarthe and the Huisne; the region of barren
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land and
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moor, partly planted with pine, between those two streams and the Loir; and the wine-growing country to the south of the Loir . Sarthe ranks high among French departments in the production of barley, and more hemp is grown here than in any other department . The raising of cattle and of horses, notably those of the Perche breed, prospers, and fowls and geese are fattened in large numbers for the Paris market . Apples are largely grown for cider . The chief forests are those of Berce in the south and Perseigne in the north, but the department owes its well-wooded appearance in a
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great measure to the hedges planted with trees which
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divide the fields .
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Coal, marble and
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free-stone are among the
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mineral products . The
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staple industry is the
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weaving of hemp and
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flax, and cotton and wool-weaving are also carried on . Paper and cardboard are made in several localities . Iron-foundries, copper and bell foundries, factories for provision-preserving, marble-
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works at Sable, potteries, tile-works, glass-works and stained-glass manufactories, currieries, machine factories, wire-
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gauze factories,
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flour-mills and distilleries are also prominent
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industrial establishments, a great variety of which are found at Le Mans . Flour, agricultural products, live stock and poultry
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farm the bulk of the exports . The department is served by the Western, the Orleans and the State
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railways, and the Sarthe and Loir provide about loo m. of waterway, though the latter
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river carries little
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traffic .

The department forms the

diocese of Le Mans and part of the ecclesiastical province of
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Tours, has its court of
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appeal at Angers, and its educational centre at
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Caen, and constitutes part of the territory of the IV_ army corps, with its headquarters at Le Mans . The four arrondissements are named from Le Mans, the chief
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town, La Fleche; Mamers and St
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Calais . The
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principal places are Le Mans, La Fleche, La Ferte Bernard, Sable and
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Solesmes, which receive
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separate treatment . Besides these places, those of chief architectural
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interest are Le Lude, which has a
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fine chateau of the Renaissance period, Sille-le-Guillaume, where there is a
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Gothic church and a stronghold of the 15th century, and St Calais, the church of which
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dates from the 14th to the 17th centuries .

End of Article: SARTHE
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JOHN SARTAIN (1808–1897)
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GIUSEPPE SARTI (1729–1802)

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