Commune of Beauvais
 Beauvais Cathedral |
| Location |
| Longitude | 02° 05' 18" E |
| Latitude | 49° 26' 05" N |
| Administration
|
| Country | France |
| Arrondissement | Beauvais |
| Canton | Chief town of 3 cantons (9 communes, 61,734 inhabitants) |
| Intercommunality | Communauté d'agglomération du Beauvaisis |
| Mayor | Caroline Cayeux (2001-2008) |
| Statistics
|
| Altitude | 57 m–170 m (avg. 67 m) |
Population (1999) | 55,392 |
| - Density (1999) | 1,663/km |
| Miscellaneous |
| INSEE/Postal code | 60057/ 60000 |
| Population sans doubles comptes: single count of residents of multiple communes (e.g. students and military personnel). |
|
Beauvais is a town and
commune of northern
France,
préfecture (capital) of the
Oise département. Population (1999): city: 57,355 (
beauvaisiens); city and suburbs: 59,003; urban area (in French:
aire urbaine): 100,733. It lies about 90 km north of
Paris.
History
Beauvais was known to the
Romans as
Caesaromagnus (though the post-Renaissance Latin rendering is
Bellovacum) and took its present name from the
Belgic tribe of the
Bellovaci, whose capital it was. In the 9th century it became a countship, which about 1013 passed to the bishops of Beauvais, who became peers of France from the twelfth century. At the coronations of kings the
Bishop of Beauvais wore the royal mantle and went, with the
Bishop of Langres, to raise the king from his throne to present him to the people.
In 1346 the town had to defend itself against the English, who again besieged it in 1433. The
siege which it suffered in 1472 at the hands of the
duke of Burgundy was rendered famous by the heroism of the women, under the leadership of
Jeanne Hachette, whose memory is still celebrated by a procession on the
14th of October (the feast of
Sainte Angadrême), in which the women take precedence of the men.
An interesting hoard of coinsis known as the “Beauvais” hoard because some of the European coins found in the hoard are from the French abbey located in Beauvais.
Coin Hoard Article
Geography
Beauvais lies at the foot of wooded hills on the left bank of the Thérain at its confluence with the Avelon. Its ancient ramparts have been destroyed, and it is now surrounded by boulevards, outside which run branches of the Thérain. In addition, there are spacious promenades in the north-east of the town.
Beauvais Cathedral
Main article: Beauvais Cathedral
Its cathedral, dedicated to
Saint Peter (
Cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Beauvais), in some respects the most daring achievement of
Gothic architecture, consists only of a
transept and
quire with
apse and seven apse-chapels. The vaulting in the interior exceeds 150 ft. in height.
The small
Romanesque church of the 10th century known as the
Basse Oeuvre occupies the site destined for the nave. Begun in
1247, under Bishop Guillaume de Grez, an extra 16 feet were added to the height, to make it the tallest cathedral in Europe: the work was interrupted in 1284 by the collapse of the vaulting of the choir, a disaster that produced a temporary failure of nerve among the masons working in Gothic style. In 1573 the fall of a too-ambitious central tower stopped work again, after which little addition was made. The transept was built from 1500 to 1548.
Its
façades, especially that on the south, exhibit all the richness of the late Gothic style. The carved wooden doors of both the north and the south portals are masterpieces respectively of Gothic and
Renaissance workmanship. The church possesses an elaborate
astronomical clock (1866) and
tapestries of the 15th and 17th centuries; but its chief artistic treasures are
stained glass windows of the 13th, 14th and 16th centuries, the most beautiful of them from the hand of the Renaissance artist, Engrand Le Prince, a native of Beauvais. To him also is due some of the stained glass in St. Etienne, the second church of the town, and an interesting example of the transition stage between the Romanesque and Gothic styles.
During the Middle Ages, on January 14, the
Feast of Asses was celebrated in the Beauvais Cathedral, in commemoration of the Flight into Egypt.
Bishops of Beauvais
Main article: Bishop of Beauvais-Noyon-Senlis
The early bishops of Beauvais are largely legendary, but a document records that the bishop who occupied the see from 632 to 660 was the thirteenth incumbent.
[1] The see, near Paris and the centers of power, was a desirable one, being a prince-bishopric with the style of
évêque-comte ('bishop-count') of Beauvais, and one of the few ecclesiastical original
Peers of the realm of France of the kingdom, with the ceremonial privilege to bears the royal mantle at the coronation.
The most famous bishops of Beauvais are Odo of Beauvais (860-881) involved in a battle of prerogatives that was a foretaste of the
Investiture Controversy; Gui (1063-85), who founded the great Beauvais school of theology at St. Quentin of Beauvais; Pierre Cauchon (1420-32), whose name is compromised in the condemnation of
Joan of Arc; Jean Juvenal des Ursins (1433-44), the chronicler of
Charles VI;
Odet Cardinal de Chatillon (1535-62), brother of
admiral Coligny, who turned Protestant at the Reformation; Francois-Joseph de la Rochefoucauld (1772-92), who died in the Carmelite prison in 1792; and François Hyacinthe Jean Feutrier (1825-30), minister of ecclesiastical affairs in the Martignac cabinet.
Other highlights
In the
Place de l'Hôtel de Ville and in the old streets near the cathedral there are several houses dating from the 12th to the 16th centuries. The
hotel de ville, close to which stands the statue of Jeanne Hachette, was built in 1752. The episcopal palace, now used as a court-house, was built in the 16th century, partly upon the
Gallo-Roman fortifications.
Birthplace of the mathematician
Henri Lebesgue. In measure-theoretic analysis and related branches of mathematics, Lebesgue-Stieltjes integration generalizes Riemann-Stieltjes and Lebesgue integration, preserving the many advantages of the latter in a more general measure-theoretic framework.
Economy
The industry of Beauvais comprises, besides the state manufacture of
tapestry, which dates from 1664, the manufacture of various kinds of cotton and woollen goods, brushes, toys, boots and shoes, and bricks and tiles. Market-gardening flourishes in the vicinity and an extensive trade is carried on in grain and wine.
The town is the seat of a bishop, a prefect and a court of assizes; it has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, together with a chamber of commerce, a branch of the Bank of France, a higher ecclesiastical seminary, a
lycée and training colleges.
Beauvais also has a small airport,
Beauvais Tillé, which is used by several "
no-frills" and charter airlines such as
Ryanair as a terminal for nearby
Paris, to which frequent shuttle buses run.
Sport
Beauvais is home to
AS Beauvais Oise, a soccer club playing in the
Championnat National (as of 2006).
Twinning
External links
equator divides the planet into a Northern Hemisphere and a Southern Hemisphere, and has a latitude of 0. Longitude is the east-west geographic coordinate measurement most commonly utilized in cartography and global navigation.
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MottoLiberté, Égalité, Fraternité"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity"
Anthem"
La Marseillaise"
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Main article
Regions
(incl. overseas regions)
Departments
(incl.
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Cantons 14
Communes 258
Préfecture Beauvais
Population
- 1999 209,540
- Density 100/km²
Location
French Land Register data, which exclude lakes, ponds, and glaciers larger than 1 km² (0.386 sq. mi.
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Administrative divisions of France
Main article
Regions
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Departments
(incl.
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only, excluding overseas departments and territories, as well as former French colonies and protectorates. Algeria and its départements, although they were an integral part of metropolitan France until 1962, are not included in the figures.
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The INSEE code is a numerical indexing code used by the French National Institute for Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE) to identify various entities, including communes, départements.
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Postal codes were introduced in France in 1972, when La Poste introduced automated sorting.
Format
The postal code (French: code postal) consists of five digits, the first two digits being the number of the
..... Click the link for more information. Administrative divisions of France
Main article
Regions
(incl. overseas regions)
Departments
(incl.
..... Click the link for more information. MottoLiberté, Égalité, Fraternité"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity"
Anthem"
La Marseillaise"
..... Click the link for more information. A
prefecture (French:
préfecture) in France can refer to :
- the Chef-lieu de département, the town in which the administration of a département is located ;
- the Chef-lieu de région
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Coat of arms of the Oise department
Location
Administration
Department number: 60
Region: Picardie
Prefecture: Beauvais
Subprefectures: Clermont
Compiègne
Senlis
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Administrative divisions of France
Main article
Regions
(incl. overseas regions)
Departments
(incl.
..... Click the link for more information. The aire urbaine (not to be confused with English "urban area") is an INSEE (the national statistics office of France) statistical region comprising a couronne périurbaine commuter belt around a contiguous pôle urbain (urban area) urban core.
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Ville de Paris
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The Belgae were a group of nations or tribes living in northern Gaul, on the west bank of the Rhine, in the 1st century BC, and later also attested in Britain. They gave their name to the Roman province of Gallia Belgica, and later, to the modern country of Belgium, where they are
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Bellovaci were among the most powerful and numerous of the Belgic tribes of north-eastern Gaul conquered by Julius Caesar in 57 BC. The name survives today in the French city of Beauvais, called by the Romans Caesaromagus.
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Bishop of Beauvais-Noyon-Senlis is a suffragan of the Archbishop of Reims.
History
The diocese of Beauvais was traditionally founded by St. Lucian (Lucianus, Lucien) in the 3rd century.
..... Click the link for more information. The bishopric of Langres is a Roman Catholic diocese comprising the département of Haute-Marne.
History
Louis Duchesne considers Senator, Justus and St. Desiderius (Didier), who was martyred during the invasion of the Vandals (about 407), as the first three
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Duchy of Burgundy, today Bourgogne, has its origin in the small portion of traditional lands of Burgundians west of river Saône which in 843 was allotted to Charles the Bald's kingdom of West Franks.
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Jeanne Laisné (b. 1456) was a French heroine known as Jeanne Fourquet and nicknamed Jeanne Hachette ('Jean the Hatchet').
We have no precise information about her family or origin.
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October 14 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
Events
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