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Aurillac
Aurillac
is the administrative center of the département
of Cantal. It
is situated, at an elevation of 2,040 feet, southwest of
Clermont-Ferrand on the Jourdanne River.
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Sylvester II,
the first French pope, was born near Aurillac.
He was educated at the nearby abbey of Saint-Gérauld that was founded in 894.
He was credited with the invention of the pendulum
clock and with the introduction of the use of Arabic
numerals into western Europe.
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During the 16th
century Religious Wars there was a general massacre of the
Huguenots by the Roman Catholics.
In revenge, the Huguenots sacked and burned Aurillac,
slaughtering its Catholics inhabitants.
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Aurillac is a
commercial and tourist center in upper Auvergne. It is known for its cattle and dairy markets and for the
light manufacturing industry.
Some of its products are umbrellas, furniture, food
processing and pharmaceuticals.
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The church of
Notre-Dame-aux-Neiges stands in the main square of the old
town, surrounded by narrow, twisting streets.
Its Gothic architecture dates from 1339.
The Aurillac castle, which has an 11th
century dungeon is now a school.
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Clermont-Ferrand
Clermont-Ferrand is the historic capital of both the département
of
Puy-de-Dôme and the region of
Auvergne.
It is located west of Lyon on the Tretaine River. To
the east, the town looks out onto the Limagne Plain.
To the north, west and south, it is surrounded by
hills.
Augustonemetum
was Roman name for the town the Romans built on the site
of the capital of the Gallic
Arverni tribe, which is now
known as Clermont-Ferrand.
The Arverni were converted to Christianity in the 3rd or 4th
century AD by Saint Austremonius, who became the first
bishop of Clermont.
Its
bishopric gave it great ecclesiastical importance during the
Middle Ages
In the 9th century it became known as Clarus Mons and, in
1731, it was merged with the 11th century
town of Montferrand, thus becoming
Clermont-Ferrand.
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Under the
Caroligians, Clermont-Ferrand was the seat of a countship.
From 886 to 918, William the Pious was the ruling
count. After
his rule, the viscounts of Clermont usurped the hereditary
title of counts of Auvergne.
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In the 19th century the town
grew
into a large manufacturing center.
The city is now highly
industrialized, producing processed foods, furniture,
clothing, linen, electronic equipment, bicycles, heavy
machinery, precision tools, chemicals and rubber products.
The Michelin Tire Company, which is one of the
largest employers in the area, is located there.
There is a nearby airport located at Aulnat.
The city is noted for its picturesque Renaissance houses and
its Romanesque ecclesiastical architecture.
The church of Notre Dame du Port, which was built in
1150, and the 13th century cathedral are among its
architectural attractions.
Notre-Dame-du-Port is an interesting example of Auvergnat
Romanesque architecture.
The
cathedral is mostly built of dark volcanic rock.
The same rock was the building material of choice for
the construction of most of the houses in the old town of
Clermont.
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The
6th century historian, Saint Gregory of Tours, was born here
as was the philosopher-mathematician Blaise Pascal, who was
born in 1623. The
Renaissance Maison des Architectes houses the Musée du
Ranquet, which is devoted to both the town's history and to
Pascal. The
city also boasts of the universities of Clermont-Ferrand I
and II. The
university was started in 1810.
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Le
Puy-en-Velay
Le Puy-en-Velay, which until 1998 was called Le Puy, is
the capital of the département
of
Haute-Loire.
The
Romans called it Anicium.
It is located near the Loire River, on the Massif
Central, about 66 miles southwest of Lyon.
The town of Le Puy-en-Velay is surrounded by an area
bristling with volcanic peaks.
It is one of the most picturesque cities in France.
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By the 4th century, Le Puy had become a Christian
center. During
the 6th century Muslim invasion of the area the
bishop of a nearby town sought refuge there.
Subsequently, the town became one of France’s
pilgrimage centers.
In the latter half of the 16th century the town
sided with the Catholic League during the Wars of Religion.
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Of
note is the red cast-iron, 53 foot high statue of Our Lady
of France that was erected in 1860 on the town’s highest
hill. Below it,
in the Old Town, is the 11th to 12th
century Romanesque Cathedral of Notre-Dame that has a
decided Byzantine influence.
The Byzantine affect is seen in the file of octagonal
cupolas (or domes) and their decoration.
The cathedral also has zebra work in the masonry.
A similar Byzantine influence, also representing
Muslim motifs that came by way of Spain, can also be seen in
Burgundy. Along
side the Cathedral of Notre-Dame is a Romanesque cloister
with Carolingian capitals.
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At the edge of town is a 260 foot high volcanic needle with
the 10th – 11th century chapel of
Saint-Michel d’Aiguilhe purched upon it.
The church was ingeniously designed and constructed
upon the rock’s irregular surfaces. The ruins of the 14th century castle of Polignac
are located on a basalt plateau about 3 miles away.
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Le
Puy has been a lace-making center since the 17th
century. Currently,
the town’s lace making is in decline.
The Crozatier Museum has a substantial lace
collection.
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Montluçon
Montluçon
is
located in the département of
Allier,
northwest of
Clermont-Ferrand.
It sits on the Cher River a little below the point
where it emerges from the gorges of its upper course.
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Montluçon’s old town surrounds a chateau that is perched on a hill.
New districts have surrounded the old town and have
spread to both banks of the Cher. The old town has a number of 15th and 16th
century wooden houses nestled among its winding streets.
A museum is now quartered in the 15th and
16th century Chateau that belonged to the dukes
of Bourbon. The
town’s library is housed in a former convent.
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Montluçon
is an industrial, commercial, and administrative centre,
with metallurgical works, plastics, tire, electrical, and
chemical factories.
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Moulins
Moulins
is
the capital of the département
of Allier.
Moulins
is located on the Allier River northwest of Lyon.
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Principal
among the town’s tourist attractions is its Flamboyant
Gothic Cathedral of Notre-Dame.
This 16th to 17th century
structure houses the 15th century triptych by the
painter Jean Perréal, of Lyon, who was known as the Master
of Moulins. The
cathedral’s stained-glass windows are from the same
period.
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Across from the cathedral is the town’s library containing a
wonderful illuminated 12th century manuscript
from nearby Souvigny Priory, which is located 7 miles to the
southeast. In a
Nearby 15th century tower is a Jaquemart
automated clock.
The
chateau of the dukes of Bourbon is the town’s prison.
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Moulins
is an agricultural market town with some light
manufacturing. Current
products are footwear, food processing and appliances.
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Riom
Riom,
which was the capital of the country
of Auvergne during the Middle ages, is located just north of
Clermont-Ferrand on the Ambène River.
It is at the western edge of the Limagne Plain.
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When
Auvergne became a part of France, Riom continued to be the
seat of the judiciary for the province of Auvergne.
Today, the old town, that surrounds the ancient
church of Saint-Amable, is encircled by the wide boulevards
that replaced the town’s ramparts.
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In
1942, the Vichy collaborative government of
Marchal Petin
set up a supreme court of justice to try two former premiers
of the Third French Republic, and others:
Leon Blum and Edouard Daladier (Paul Reynaud, an other former premier of
the Republic was not tried). General Maurice Gamelin was
also a defendant.
They
were tried, by Vichy, for their responsibility in the German
defeat of France.
The
trial began in
Riom on February 19, 1942.
This process marked the beginning of Vichy’s
decline in prestige; the coup de grace to Vichy’s prestige
was the strong British Commando raid on Saint-Nazaire, and
its consequences, on March 27, 1942.
Germany seized Vichy France on November 11, 1942.
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Pharmaceuticals
and tobacco products are manufactured in Riom.
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Vichy
Vichy,
which was known to the Romans as Vicus Calidus, is the best
known health spa in France.
It is situated on the Allier River. Its two largest hot water spa centers face the river.
They are separated from the town by the parks that
surround them. The
town has the appearance of being modern with more than its
share of hotels.
Due to its alkaline springs and spas, Vichy had become
famous by the 17th century.
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The
Vichy spas were long the favorites of the European royalty
for ‘taking the waters’.
The French kings followed an almost ritual pattern
for their visits to Vichy, and this pattern was continued
through the reign of
Napoleon III in the last
half of the 19th century.
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During
WWII, following the collapse of the French army and the
Franco-German Armistice of 1940, Marshal
Philippe Pétain
set up his collaborationist government in Vichy.
The
collaborationist government soon became known as the
‘Vichy government’.
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Today,
more than 140,000 people go to Vichy to ‘take the
waters’ every year.
Additionally,
Vichy water is bottled and sold throughout the world.
In France, a bottle of Vichy water is commonly
ordered to accompany a restaurant meal.
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