Online Encyclopedia
Make a correction
Your email address will not appear on the site. Note, comments may take some time to be approved.
Back to article:
BAY OF BISCAY (Fr. Golfe de Gascogne; Sp. Golfo de Vizcaya)
Your email:
Article name:
Article content:
BISCAY, BAY OF (Fr. Golfe de Gascogne; Sp. Golfo de Vizcaya), an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean; bounded on the E. and N.E. by France, as far as the island of Ushant, and on the S. by Spain as far as Cape Ortegal. The Bay of Biscay is the Sinus Aquitanicus, Sinus Cantabricus or Cantaber Oceanus of the Romans; hence it is sometimes known as the Cantabrian Sea. Its modern English"name is a corrupt form of the Spanish Vizcaya. The bay forms a fairly regular curve, broken on the French sea-board only by the estuaries of the Loire, Garonne, Adour and other rivers.. The rugged Spanish coast is indented by many fjord-like inlets, especially in the west, where navigation is some-times difficult and dangerous; but its rivers are comparatively unimportant. The exposed position of the bay, and the diversity of its currents, have rendered it notorious for its storms.