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SOMME

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 393 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SOMME  , a

department of
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northern France, formed in 1790 of a large
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part of the province of Picardy (comprising
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Vermandois, Santerre, Amienois, Ponthieu, Vimeu, and Marquenterre) and a small portion of
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Artois . Pop . (1906), 532,567 .
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Area 2423 sq. m . It is bounded on the N. by Pas-de-
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Calais, E. by
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Aisne, S. by
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Oise, and S.W. by Seine-Inferieure, and its sea-coast extends 28 M. along the
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English Channel . Two streams flowing into the Channel—the Authie on the north and the Bresle on the southwest—bound it in these directions . The
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surface consists of
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great
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rolling plains, generally well cultivated and very fertile . The highest point, about 700 ft. above the sea, lies in the south-west, not far from Aumale . From the mouth of the Authie to the
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Bay of the Somme the coast is lined with a belt of sand
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dunes about 2 M. broad, behind which is the Marquenterre, a tract of 5o,000 acres reclaimed from the sea by means of dykes and traversed by drainage canals . The Bay of the Somme, obstructed by dangerous sandbanks, contains the three fishing ports of Crotoy, St Valery, which is also the chief commercial
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port, and Le Hourdel . Next come the
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shingle banks, behind which the low fields of Cayeux (25,000 acres) have been reclaimed; and then at the
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hamlet of Ault commence the
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chalk cliffs, which continue onwards into
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Normandy . The
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river Somme rises to the N.N.E. of St Quentin in the department of Aisne, where it has a course of about 25 m.; it traverses the department of Somme from the south-east to the north-west for a distance of about 125 m., through a marshy valley abounding in peat .

Commanded by

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Ham, Peronne,
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Amiens and
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Abbeville, this valley forms a northern
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line of defence for Paris . Apart from the
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water-power it supplies, the Somme is of great commercial value, being accompanied by a canal all the way from its source wherever it is not itself navigable . From Abbeville to St Valery its
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lower course forms a maritime canal 165 ft. wide, 12 ft. deep, and 8 to 9 M. long, capable of bearing at high tide vessels of 300 tons burden . From St Valery to the open sea the current hollows out a very variable bed accessible at certain tides for vessels of 500 tons . The most important affluents of the Somme—the Ancre from the north-east by way of Albert and Corbie, the Avre from the south-east by Roye, and the Selle from the south by Conty—join the main streams at Amiens . The Authie and the Bresle are respectively 63 and 45 M. long . The latter ends in a maritime canal about 2 M. long between Eu and Treport . The mean temperature is lower. than that of Paris (49° F. at Abbeville) . The mean
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annual rainfall is 33 in. at Abbeville . The department, especially in the north-east, is one of the best cultivated in France . Beetroot for
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sugar is the
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staple crop of the Peronne arrondissement; cereals, chiefly wheat,
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fodder and mangel-wurzels, oil
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plants,
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poppy, colza,
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flax, hemp and potatoes are grown through-out the department, the latter more largely on the seaboard . Stock-raising of all kinds is successfully carried on .

No

wine is grown, the
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principal drinks being
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beer and cider . Market gardening is of great importance round Amiens . Peat-cutting is actively carried on, the best qualities and the deepest workings being in the valley of the Somme, between Amiens and Abbeville . Phosphate of lime is also an important
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mineral product . The manufacture of a great variety of textile goods, especially
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velvet (Amiens), of
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beet sugar and
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alcohol, and of locks,
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safes and the like (in the Vimeu), are characteristic
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industries of the department, which also carries on saw-milling,
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flour-milling,
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brewing, dyeing, ironfounding and
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forging, printing and the manufacture of paper, chemical products,
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machines and ironmongery,
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hosiery (in the Santerre), &c . Cereals, horses of the Boulogne or Norman breed, cattle, hemp and
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linen, and the manufactured goods are the exports of the department . St Valery (pop . 3389) exports vegetables and
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farm-products (to England), and shingle for the manufacture of earthenware . Besides the raw materials for the manufacturing industries, wines and
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timber, the latter largely imported at St Valery, dyestuffs and
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coal are imported . The department is served principally by the Northern railway, and its canals and rivers provide 140 M. of navigable waterway . Administratively the department comprises 5 arrondissements (those of Amiens, the capital, Abbeville,
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Doullens,
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Montdidier and Peronne), 41 cantons and 836 communes . The department belongs to the academie (educational circumscription) of
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Lille, and constitutes the diocese of Amiens, which city is also the seat of a court of
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appeal and the headquarters of the region of the II. army corps, wherein the department is included .

The most noteworthy places are Amiens (the capital), Abbeville, Montdidier, Peronne, Doullens, St Riquier,

Crecy and Ham, which are treated under those headings . The following places may also be mentioned : Albert (pop . 6656), after Amiens and Abbeville the most populous
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town in the department and a centre for machine construction; Villers-Bretonneux (pop . 4447), a centre of hosiery manufacture; Corbie, once celebrated for its
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Benedictine abbey (founded in the 7th century) the church of which (16th–18th century) is still to be seen; L'Etoile, with the well-preserved remains of a
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Roman camp; Folleville, which has a church (15th century) containing the
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fine Renaissance tomb of Raoul de Lannoy; Picquigny, with the remains of a chateau of the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries, once one of the chief strongholds of Picardy; Rue, where there is a fine
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chapel of the 15th century; and Tilloloy, which has a Renaissance church .

End of Article: SOMME
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