Online Encyclopedia

VIRE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 111 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VIRE  , a

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town of north-western France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of
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Calvados, 47 M . S.W. of
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Caen by
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rail . Pop . (rgo6) 6228 . Vire stands on an eminence surrounded on three sides by the Vire and crowned by the remains of a 12th-century chateau . The church of Notre Dame (13th to 15th century), and the picturesque Tour de 1'Horloge (13th century), beneath which runs the chief street, are the
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principal buildings . A library and a small museum with good collections of
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porcelain, pictures and curiosities, are installed in the town hall (17th and 18th centuries) . In the public garden there is a statue of Marshal Jacques Goyon, comte de Matignon (1525–1597); and the native poets C . J . L . Chenedolle and P . L .

R .

Castel are represented, the former by a marble bust, the latter by a
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bronze statue . Vire grew up around a castle built in the 12th century by Henry I. of England, and in the
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middle ages was one of the important strongholds of
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Normandy . South-west of the town is the
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gorge called Vaux-de-Vire, in which was situated the mill of Olivier Basselin (15th century), the fuller and reputed author of the satiric songs, hence known as " vaudevilles" (see BASSELIN, OLIVIER) .

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