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TROYES

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 320 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TROYES  , a

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town of France, capital of the department of
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Aube, 104 M . E.S.E. of Paris on the Eastern railway to Belfort . Pop . (1906), 51,228 . The town is situated in the wide alluvial plain watered by the Seine, the main stream of which skirts it on the east . It is traversed by several small arms of the
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river, and the Canal de la Haute-Seine divides it into an upper town, on the
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left
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bank, and a
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lower town on the right bank . The streets are, for the most
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part, narrow and crooked . It is surrounded by a belt of boulevards, outside which lie suburbs . The churches of the town are numerous, and especially rich in stained glass of the Renaissance period, from the hands of
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Jean Soudain, Jean Macadre, Linard Gonthier and other artists . St
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Pierre, the
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cathedral, was begun in 1208, and it was not until 164o that the north tower of the
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facade was completed . With a height to the vaulting of only 98 ft. it is less lofty than other important
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Gothic cathedrals of France . It consists of an apse with seven apse chapels, a choir with double aisles, on the right of which are the
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treasury and sacristy, a transept without aisles, a
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nave with double aisles and side chapels and a vestibule .

The

west facade belongs to the 16th century with the exception of the upper portion of the north tower; the south tower has never been completed . Three portals, that in the centre surmounted by a
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fine flamboyant rose window, open into the vestibule . The stained glass of the interior
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dates mainly from the 15th and 16th centuries . The treasury contains some fine enamel
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work and lace . The church of St Urban, begun in 1262 at the expense of Pope Urban IV., a native of the town, is a charming specimen of Gothic architecture, the lightness and delicacy of its construction rivalling that of churches built a century later . The glass windows, the profusion of which is the most remarkable feature of the church, date, for the most part, from the years 1265 to 1280 . The church of La Madeleine, built at the beginning of the 13th century, and enlarged in the 16th. contains a rich rood-screen by Giovanni Gualdo (1508) and fine stained-glass windows of the 16th century . The church of St Jean, though hidden among old houses, is one of the most picturesque in Troyes . The choir is a fine example of Renaissance architecture and the church contains a high altar of the 17th century, stained glass of the 16th century and many other
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works of
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art . St Nicholas is a
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building of the 16th century with a beautiful vaulted gallery in the interior . The church of St Pantal6on of the 16th century and that of St Nizier, mainly of the same period, contain remarkable sculptures and paintings . St Remi (14th, 15th and 16th centuries) and St Martin-es-Vignes '(16th and 17th centuries), the latter notable for its 17th-century windows, are also of
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interest .

The old

abbey of St Loup is occupied by a TROYES museum containing numerous collections . The Hotel Dieu of the 18th century is remarkable for the fine gilded iron railing of its courtyard . Most of the old houses of Troyes are of wood, but some of stone of the 16th century are remarkable for their beautiful and
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original architecture . Amongst the latter the hotels de Vauluisant, de Mauroy and de Marisy are specially interesting . The prefecture occupies the buildings of the old abbey of Notre-Dame-aux-Nonnains; the HOtel-de-ville dates from the 17th century; the savings bank, the theatre and the lyc&e are
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modern buildings . A marble monument to the Sons of Aube commemorates the war of 1870-71 . Troyes is the seat of a bishop and a court of
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assize . Its public institutions include a tribunal of first instance, a tribunal of commerce, a council of trade arbitrators, a chamber of commerce and a branch of the Bank of France . A lycee, an ecclesiastical college, training colleges for male and
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female teachers, and a school of
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hosiery are its chief educational institutions . There are also several learned societies and a large library . The dominant industry in Troyes is the manufacture of cotton, woollen and
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silk hosiery, which is exported to Spain, Italy, the
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United States and South
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America; printing and dyeing of fabrics, tanning, distilling, and the manufacture of looms and iron goods are among the other
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industries . The market gardens and nurseries of the neighbourhood are well known .

There is trade in the wines of

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Burgundy and
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Champagne, in
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industrial products, in snails and in the dressed pork prepared in the town .
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History.—At the beginning of the
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Roman period Troyes (Augustobona) was the
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principal settlement of the Tricassi, from whose name its own is derived . It owed its conversion to
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Christianity to Saints Savinian and Potentian, and in the first
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half of the 4th century its bishopric was created as a suffragan of
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Sens . St Loup, the most illustrious bishop of Troyes, occupied the episcopal seat from 426 to 479 . He is said to have persuaded Attila, chief of the
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Huns, to leave the town unpillaged, and is known to have exercised
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great influence in the Church of Gaul . The importance of the monastery of St Loup, which he founded, was overshadowed by that of the abbey of nuns known as Notre-Dame-aux-Nonnains, which possessed large
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schools and enjoyed great privileges in the town, in some points exercising authority even over the bishops themselves . In 892 and 898 Troyes suffered from the depredations of the
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Normans, who on the second occasion reduced the town to ruins . In the early
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middle ages the bishops were supreme in Troyes, but in the loth century this supremacy was transferred to the
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counts of Troyes (see below), who from the 11th century were known as the counts of Champagne . Under their
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rule the city attained great prosperity . Its fairs, which had already made it a prominent commercial centre, flourished under their patronage, while the canals constructed at their expense aided its industrial development . In the 12th century both the counts and the ecclesiastics joined in the
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movement for the enfranchisement of their
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serfs, but it was not till 1230 and 1242 that Thibaut IV. granted charters to the inhabitants . A disastrous fire occurred in 1188; more disastrous still was the union of Champagne with the domains of the king of France in 1304, since one of the first
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measures of Louis le Hutin was to forbid the Flemish merchants to attend the fairs, which from that time declined in importance .

For a

short time (1419-1425), during the
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Hundred Years' War, the town was the seat of the royal government, and in 1420 the
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signing of the Treaty of Troyes was followed by the
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marriage of Henry V. of England with Catherine, daughter of Charles VI., in the church of St Jean . In 1429 the town capitulated to
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Joan of Arc . The next hundred years was a period of prosperity, marred by the destruction of half the town by the fire of 1524 . In the 16th century Protestantism made some progress in Troyes but never obtained a decided hold . In 1562, after a short occupation, the Calvinist troops were forced to retire, and on the
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news of the
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massacre of St Bartholomew fifty Protestants were put to
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death . The revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 was a severe blow to the commerce of Troyes, which was not revived by the re-establishment of the former fairs in 1697 . The population fell from 40,000 to 24,000 between the beginning of the 16th century and that of the 19th century . See T . Boutiot, Histoire de Troyes et de la Champagne meridionale (4 vols., Troyes, 187o–1880); R . Koechlin and J . J . Marquet de Vasselot, La Sculpture a Troyes et clans la Champagne meridionale au seizieme siecle (Paris, 1900) .

(R .

End of Article: TROYES
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JEAN FRANCOIS DE TROY (1679–1752)
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