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TOURS , a See also: town of central See also: France, capital of the department of See also: Indre-et-See also: Loire, 145 M
.
S.W. of See also: Paris by See also: rail
.
Pop
.
(1906), town 61,507; commune, 67,601
.
Tours lies on the See also: left See also: bank of the Loire on a flat See also: tongue of See also: land between that See also: river and the See also: Cher a little above their junction
.
The •right bank of the
Loire is bordered by hills at the See also: foot of which lie the suburbs of St Cyr and St Symphorien
.
The river is crossed by two suspension See also: bridges, partly built on islands in the river, and by a See also: stone
See also: bridge of the second See also: half of the 18th century, the Pont de Tours
.
Many foreigners, especially See also: English, live at or visit Tours, attracted by the town itself, its mild See also: climate and situation in " the garden of France," and the historic chateaux in the vicinity
.
The See also: Boulevard See also: Beranger, with its continuation, the Boulevard Heurteloup, traverses Tours from west to See also: east dividing it into two parts; the old town to the See also: north, with its narrow streets and See also: ancient houses, contains the See also: principal buildings, the shops and the business houses, while the new town to the See also: south, centring round a See also: fine public garden, is almost entirely residential
.
The Rue Nationale, the widest and handsomest street in Tours, is a prolongation of the Pont de Tours and runs at right angles to the boulevards, continuing under the name of the Avenue de See also: Grammont until it reaches the Cher
.
St Gatien, the See also: cathedral of Tours, though hardly among the greatest churches of France, is nevertheless of considerable See also: interest
.
A cathedral of the first half of the 12th century was burnt in 1166 during the See also: quarrel between See also: Louis VII. of France and
See also: Henry II. of
See also: England
.
A new cathedral was begun about 117o but not finished till 1547 . The See also: lower portions of the west towers belong to the 12th century, the choir to the 13th century; the transept and east bays of the See also: nave to the 14th; the remaining bays, a cloister on the north, and the See also: facade, profusely decorated in the Flamboyant See also: style, to the 15th and 16th centuries, the upper See also: part of the towers being in the See also: Renaissance style of the 16th century
.
In the interior there is fine stained See also: glass, that of the choir (13th century) being especially remarkable
.
The See also: tomb. of the See also: children of See also: Charles VIII., constructed in the first years of the 16th century and attributed to the
See also: brothers Juste is also of See also: artistic interest
.
An example of Romanesque architecture survives in the See also: great square tower of the See also: church of St
See also: Julien, the rest of which is in the early See also: Gothic style of the 13th century, with the exception of two apses added in the 16th century
.
Two towers and a Renaissance cloister are the chief remains of the celebrated See also: basilica of St See also: Martin built mainly during the 12th and 13th centuries and demolished in 1802
.
It stood on the site of an earlier and very famous church built from 466 to 472 by
See also: bishop St Perpetuus and destroyed together with many other churches in a fire in 998
.
Two other churches worthy of mention are Notre-See also: Dame la Riche, originally built in the 13th century, rebuilt in the 16th, and magnificently restored in the 19th century; and St Saturnin of the 15th century
.
The new basilica of St Martin and the church of St Etienne are See also: modern
.
Of the old houses of Tours the hotel Gouin and that wrongly known as the See also: house of See also: Tristan 1'Hermite (both of the 15th century) are the best known
.
Tours has several learned See also: societies and a valuable library, including among its See also: MSS. a gospel of the 8th century on which the See also: kings of France took See also: oath as honorary canons of the church of St Martin
.
The museum contains a collection of pictures, and the museum of the Archaeological Society of See also: Touraine has valuable antiquities; there is also a natural See also: history museum
.
The chief public monuments are the fountain of the Renaissance built by Jacques deSee also: Beaune (d
.
1527), See also: financial See also: minister, the statues of See also: Descartes, See also: Rabelais and Balzac, the latter See also: born at Tours, and a monument to the three doctors Bretonneau, Trousseau and Velpeau
.
Tours is the seat of an archbishop, a See also: prefect, and a See also: court of assizes, and headquarters of the IX
.
Army Corps and has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, a See also: board of See also: trade arbitration, a chamber of commerce and a branch of the Bank of France
.
Among its educational institutions are a preparatory school of See also: medicine and See also: pharmacy, lycees for both sexes, a training See also: college for girls and See also: schools of fine See also: art and See also: music
.
The See also: industrial establishments of the town include See also: silk factories and numerous important . printing-See also: works, See also: steel works, irore foundries and factories for automobiles, machinery, oil, lime and cement, biscuits, portable buildings, stained glass, boots and shoes and See also: porcelain
.
A considerable trade is carried on in the See also: wine of the See also: district and in See also: brandy and in dried fruits, sausages and confectionery, for wnich the town is well known
.
Three-quarters of a mile to the south-west of Tours lie unimportant remains of Plessis-See also: les-Tours, the chateau built by Louis XI., whither he retired before his See also: death in 1483
.
On the right bank of the Loire 2 M. above the town are the ruins of the ancient and powerful abbey of Marmoutier
.
Five See also: miles to the north-west is the large agricultural reformatory of Mettray founded in 1839
.
Tours (see TounAINE), under the Gauls the capital of the Turones or Turons, originally stood on the right bank of the Loire, a little above the See also: present See also: village of St Symphorien
.
At
first called Altionos, the town was afterwards known as Caesarodunum
.
The See also: Romans removed the town from the See also: hill where it originally stood to the plain on the left bank of the river
.
Behind the present cathedral, remains of the amphitheatre (443 ft. in length by 394 in breadth) built towards the end of the 2nd century might formerly be seen
.
Tours became Christian about 250 through the preaching of Gatien, who founded the bishopric
.
The first cathedral was built a
See also: hundred years later by St Litorius
.
The bishopric became an archbishopric when Gra tian made Tours the capital of Lugdunensis Tertia though the bishops did not adopt the title of archbishop till the 9th century
.
About the beginning of the 5th century the official name of Caesarodunuln was changed for that of Civitas Turonorum
.
St Martin, the great apostle of the Gauls, was bishop of Tours in the 4th century, and he was buried in a suburb which soon became as important as the town itself from the number of pilgrims who flocked to his tomb
.
Towards the end of the 4th century, apprehensive of See also: barbarian invasion, the inhabitants pulled down some of their earlier buildings in See also: order to raise a fortified See also: wall, the course of which can still be traced in places
.
Their advanced fort of Larcay still overlooks the valley of the Cher
.
Affiliated to the Armorican confederation in 435, the town did not fall to the Visigoths till 473, and the new masters were always hated
.
It became part of the Frankish dominions under See also: Clovis, who, in consideration of the help afforded by St Martin, presented the church with See also: rich gifts out of the spoils taken from Alaric, confirmed and extended its right of sanctuary, and accepted for himself and his successors the title of See also: canon of St Martin
.
At the end of the 6th century the bishopric was held by St See also: Gregory of Tours
.
Tours See also: grew rapidly in prosperity under the See also: Merovingians, but abuse of the right of sanctuary led to great disorder, and the church itself became a hotbed of See also: crime
.
Charlemagne re-established discipline in the disorganized monastery and set over it the learned See also: Alcuin, who established at Tours one of the See also: oldest public schools of Christian philosophy and See also: theology
.
The arts flourished at Tours in the See also: middle ages and the town was the centre of the Poitevin Romanesque school of architecture
.
The abbey was made into a collegiate church in the 11th century, and was for a See also: time affiliated to See also: Cluny, but soon came under the See also: direct See also: rule of See also: Rome, and for long had bishops of its own
.
The suburb in which the monastery was situated became as important as Tours itself under the name of Martinopolis
.
The See also: Normans, attracted by its riches, pillaged it in 853 and 903
.
Strong walls were erected from 906 to 910, and the name was changed to that of See also: Chateauneuf
.
See also: Philip
See also: Augustus sanctioned the communal privileges which the inhabitants forced from the canons of St Martin and the innumerable offerings of princes, lords and pilgrims maintained the prosperity of the town all through the middle ages
.
A 13th-century writer speaks with See also: enthusiasm of the See also: wealth and luxury of the inhabitants of Chateauneuf, of the beauty and chastity of the See also: women and of the rich shrine of the See also: saint
.
In the 14th century Tours was See also: united to Chateauneuf within a See also: common wall, of which a round tower, the Tour de See also: Guise, remains, and both towns were put under the same administration
.
The numerous and long-continued visits of Charles VII., Louis XI., who established the silk-industry, and Charles VIII. during the 15th century favoured the commerce and industry of the town, then peopled by 75,000 inhabitants
.
In the 15th and 16th centuries the presence of See also: Jean Fouquet the painter of Michel See also: Colomb and the brothers Juste the sculptors, enhanced the fame of the town in the sphere of art
.
In 1562 Tours suffered from the violence of both Protestants and Catholics, and enjoyed no real security till after the pact entered into at Plessis-lesTours between Henry III. and Henry ofSee also: Navarre in 1589
.
In the 17th and 18th centuries Tours was the capital of the See also: government of Touraine
.
Its manufactures, of which silk See also: weaving was the chief, suffered from the revocation of the Edict of See also: Nantes (1685)
.
In 1772 its mint, whence were issued the " livres " of Tours (librae Turonenses) was suppressed
.
During the Revolution the town formed a See also: base of operations of the Republicans against the Vendeans
.
In 187o it was for a
time the seat of the delegation of the government of See also: national defence
.
In 1871 it was occupied by the Germans from the loth of See also: January to the 8th of See also: March
.
See P
.
Vitry, Tours et les chateaux de Touraine (Paris, 1905) ; E
.
Giraudet, Histoire de la vile de Tours (Tours, 1873) ; Les Artistes tourangeaux (Tours, 1885)
.
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