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VALENCE , a See also: town of See also: south-eastern See also: France, capital of the department of DrBme, situated on the See also: left See also: bank of the Rhone, 65 m
.
S. of See also: Lyons on the railway to See also: Marseilles
.
Pop
.
(1906), town, 22,950; commune, 28,112
.
The See also: river is here crossed by a See also: fine suspension See also: bridge
.
The See also: cathedral of St See also: Apollinaris, which has an interesting apse, was rebuilt in the lrth century in the Romanesque See also: style of See also: Auvergne and consecrated in 1095 by See also: Urban II
.
It was greatly injured in the See also: wars of See also: religion, but restored in the first See also: decade of the 17th century
.
The porch and the See also: stone tower above it were rebuilt in 1861
.
The
See also: church contains the monument of
See also: Pius VI., who died at Valence in 1799
.
A curious See also: house (Maison See also: des Totes) of the 16th century has a sculptured front with heads of See also: Homer, See also: Hippocrates, See also: Aristotle,
Pythagoras, &c
.
The Maison See also: Dupre-Latour with a beautifully carved doorway and the sepulchral monument known as the Pendentif date from the same century
.
The library and the museum containing See also: Roman antiquities, sculptures and a picture gallery, are housed in the old ecclesiastical seminary
.
The most notable of the monuments erected by Valence to its natives are those to Emile Augier the dramatist by the duchess ofSee also: Uzes (1897) and to General Championnet (1762-1800)
.
Valence is the seat of a See also: bishop, a See also: prefect and a See also: court of assizes, and has a tribunal of first instance, a See also: board of See also: trade arbitration, a chamber of commerce, a branch of the Bank of France, training colleges for both sexes, and a communal See also: college
.
Among the See also: industries are See also: flour-milling, See also: cooperage and the manufacture of furniture,
See also: liquorice, whitewash, and See also: tapioca and similar foods
.
Trade, in which the See also: port on the Rhone shares, is in fruit, cattle and live-stock, See also: wine, early vegetables and See also: farm produce, &c
.
Valentia was the capital of the Segalauni, and the seat of a celebrated school See also: prior to the Roman See also: conquest, a colony under See also: Augustus, and an important town of Viennensis Prima under Valentinian
.
Its bishopric See also: dates probably from the 4th century
.
It was ravaged by the Alani and other barbarians, and See also: fell successively under the power of the Burgundians, the Franks, the sovereigns of See also: Arles, the emperors of See also: Germany, the See also: dukes of See also: Valentinois, the See also: counts of Toulouse, and its own bishops
.
The bishops were often in conflict with the citizens and the dukes of Valentinois, and to strengthen their hands against the latter the See also: pope in 1275 See also: united their bishopric with that of Die
.
The citizens put themselves under the See also: protection of the dauphin, and in 1456 had their rights and privileges See also: con-firmed by See also: Louis XI. and put on an equal footing with those of the rest of
See also: Dauphine, the bishops consenting to recognize the See also: suzerainty of the dauphin
.
In the 16th century Protestantism spread freely under Bishop See also: Jean de See also: Montluc, and Valence became the capital of the Protestants of the province in 1563
.
The town was fortified by See also: Francis I
.
It had become the seat of a celebrated university in the See also: middle of the 15th century; but the revocation of the edict of See also: Nantes struck a fatal See also: blow at its industry, commerce and population
.
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