Online Encyclopedia

VOSGES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 214 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VOSGES  , a frontier

department of eastern France, formed in 1790 chiefly of territory previously belonging to
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Lorraine, together with portions of Franche-Comte and
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Champagne, and bounded N. by the department of Meurthe-et-Moselle, E. by Alsace, S.E. by the territory of Belfort, S. by the department of Haute-
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Saone, W. by Haute-
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Marne and N.W. i (q.v.) . The rounded summits of the Grandes Vosges are called by Meuse . Pop . (1906) 429,812;
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area, 2279 sq. m . The ' ballons." The departments of Vosges and Haute Saone are Vosges mountains (see be_ow) form a natural boundary on divided from Alsace and the territory of Belfort by the Ballon d'Alsace the east, their highest French eminence, the Hohneck, attaining 4ASI ft . The Monts Faucilles
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traverse the south of the department to a broad curve declining on the north into elevated plateaus, on the south encircling the upper basin of the Saone . This chain, dividing the basins of the Rhone and the Rhine, forms
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part of the
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European
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watershed between the basins of the Mediterranean and
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Atlantic . The Moselle and the Meuse, tributaries of the Rhine, have the largest drainage areas in the department; a small
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district in the N.W. sends its waters to the Seine, the rest belongs to the basin of the Rhone . The Moselle rises in the Col de Bussang in the extreme south-east, and in a N.N.W. course of about 70 M. in the department receives the Moselotte and the Vologne on the right; the
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Mortagne and Meurthe on the right and the Madon on the
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left
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bank also belong to this department though they join the Moselle outside its
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borders . The source of the Saone is on the
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southern slope of the Faucilles . On the
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shore of Lake
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Gerardmer lies the beautifully situated
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town of Gerardmer, a well-known centre for mountain excursions . The
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elevation and the northward exposure of the valleys make the
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climate severe, and a constant dampness prevails, owing both to the abundance of the rainfall and to the impermeability of the subsoil .

The

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average temperature at Epinal (1070 ft.) is 49° F . The
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annual rainfall at Epinal is 28 in., at St Die 32 in. and in the mountains more . Arable farming flourishes in the western districts where wheat, oats and potatoes are largely grown . The
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vine is cultivated on the
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river banks, to best
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advantage on those of the Moselle . Pasture is abundant in the mountainous region, where cheese-making is carried on to some extent, but the best grazing is in the central valleys . Forests, which occupy large tracts on the flanks of the Vosges, cover about one-third of the department, and are a
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principal source of its
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wealth . Sawmills are numerous in the Vosges and the manufacture of furniture, sabots, brushes and wood-working in general are prominent
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industries . The department has mines of lignite and stone quarries of various kinds . There are numerous
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mineral springs, of which those of
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Contrexeville, Plombieres, Vittel, Bains-
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les-Bains, Martigny-les-Bains and Bussang may be named . The manufacture of textiles is the chief industry, comprising the spinning and
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weaving of cotton, wool,
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silk, hemp and
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flax, and the manufacture of
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hosiery and of embroidery and lace, Mirecourt (pop . 5092) being an important centre for the two last . The department forms the diocese of St Die (province of
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Besancon), has its court of
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appeal and educational centre at
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Nancy, and belongs to the district of the NX .

Army Corps . It is divided into the arrondissements of Epinal, Mirecourt, Neufchhtcau,
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Remiremont and St Die, with 29 cantons and 530 communes .

End of Article: VOSGES
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