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A70427 An historical and geographical description of France extracted from the best authors, both ancient and modern. By J. De Lacrose, Eccl. Angl. Presb. Lacroze, Jean Cornand de, d. ca. 1705. 1694 (1694) Wing L136A; ESTC R223644 308,707 674

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but the New is greater and better fortified The French destroy'd its Fortifications in 1664 and afterwards repaired them There is a Chamber of Accounts and a Seneshalship This Province has also Bar le Duc Capital of the Dutchy of that Name It was built by Frederick Duke of the Mozellane Lorrain in 951 and fortified with a strong Castle to prevent the Incursions of the Champenois There were several other strong Places amongst the rest Marsal and Moyenvic whose Fortifications the French have destroyed as well as the Castle of Bar le Duc. Near Moyenvic are commodious Salt-Pits I must not forget the three Bishopricks taken from Charles V. in 1552. viz. Toul Mets and Verdun because they are included in this Province and are nearly ty'd to it especially in what concerns Spiritual Jurisdiction though as to the Civil they make a separate Government Toul Tullum Leucorum is a Town well built situated upon the Mosell twelve Miles from Nancy It 's pretty big and boasts of St. Bernard's Tomb over which is a Crown extraordinary well worked its Diocess is pretty large Verdun Verodunum a very pleasant City situated in a fruitful and good Soil on the River Meuse Twenty six Miles from Mets Its Bishops take the Title of Counts of Verdun and Princes of the Holy Empire It has a strong Citadel and Baylwick and is renowned for its Aniseed Mets is also a very pleasant Town both for its Houses its Cathedral of St. Stephen a true Master-piece of Architecture and the River Moselle and Seille that wash it It is a very ancient City since Cesar Plinius Tacite and Ptolomy mention it under the Name of Divodurum Mediomatricum and speak of it as the chief Town of that Country and of the People called Mediomatrices now Les habitans du pais Messin In process of time it became still more and more Famous and under the French Kings of the first Race was Capital of the Kingdom of Austrasia called also the Kingdom of Mets since Theodoric Son to Clovis the Great had chosen it for the Seat of his Empire In the Decay of Charlemaign's House Mets erected it self into a free Imperial Town under the Government of its own Magistrates who had Power of Life and Death and of Coining of Money And so jealous they were of their Liberty that Charles VII King of France besieging them ●n 1444 on the behalf of Renatus Duke of Lorrain they rather chose to see their Country wasted during seven Months and to redeem themselves with 300000 Livres than to loose their Liberty Thus they kept it till the Year 1552 that their City was taken by the Lord of Montmorency High Constable of France In the Month of October of the same Year Charles V. besieged it in vain and as it was the last Undertaking of this Emperour it gave occasion to this Verse alluding to the modern Name of this Town in Latin Metae Siste viam Metis haec tibi meta datur There is seen in St. Stephen's Church a Vessel of Red Porphyry ten Foot long and all of a piece which serves to keep their Holy Water in This great Town has no Sub●urbs and is all surrounded with a strong Rampier and deep and wide Ditches that can be filled at pleasure only opening a Sluce to let in the Moselle Yet for its greater Strength a Cittadel with four Bastions have been built there of late The People are well bred Civil and Numerous and drive a great Trade into Germany The Circumference of the Town is pretty big its Bishop entitles himself Prince of the Empire and has four Arch-Deacons under him with 623 Parishes In 1633 Lewis XIII established there a Parliament which the Commissioners of the Emperour opposed saying That the French King was only Protector of the three Bishopricks and not absolute Sovereign thereof and consequently that he might not deprive the Inhabitants of their ancient Laws and the Right they had to bring their Appeals before the Imperial Chamber at Spire These Complaints lasted to the Peace of Munster in which the three Bishopricks and Moyenvic were yielded unconditionally and for ever to the Crown of France save only the Right of Metropolitan to the Archbishop of Triers This Parliament as it was the last so it was at first the least considerable next to that of Pau the three Bishopricks only resorting to it But since the Conquest of Lorrain Luxemburg and adjacent Countries its Jurisdiction is mightily inlarged It made a great Noise some time after the Peace of Nimeguen about the Year 1680 when the French King erected there a Chamber of Dependencies whose Judges summoned the Spanish Subjects to come and swear Allegiance to the French King under pretence that they were depending upon some of his new Conquests By this Shrewdness he got more Lands during the Peace than he had done in the War The Dukedom of Luxemburg is under the Governour of Lorrain but I supersede to make a particular Description of it because the Low-Countries deserve a Treatise by it self I shall only observe that there is a Soveraign Council in the Capital whereunto the whole Province resorts At a League 's distance from the Town is a Village called Jovy where are still to be seen some Remains of an Aqueduct built by the Romans with Arches of a fine white Stone cut in Form of Bricks and above Sixty Foot high Besides this there is another considerable Place near Nancy called St. Nicolas that should deserve rather to be called one of the greatest Towns of Lorrain for the Number of its Inhabitants and considerable Traffick than a simple Borough if it were walled in The other most considerable Places near the Capital are Fruart which is but a League off it Ormes Bayon Pont a Mousson famous for its University founded by Charles Cardinal of Lorrain on behalf of the Jesuits An. 1573 and very pleasant by reason of its fruitful Soil and of the Mosell which runs through the middle of the Town and is passed with 〈◊〉 Bridge whence and from a neighbouring Mountain called Mousson is derived th● Name of Pont à Mousson Then Vezelize Roziere Blancmont Gerbevillier Charmes Chastenoy Moranges Vaucouleur the Birth-place of Jane d' Arc called the Virgin or Maiden of Orleans Mexan-sous-Bresse Dompaire Deneure Hoden Chasteau-Rambervillier Raon Bellemont Neuf-chastel Magstat Marchainville Espinal Bruyeres Darney Ormont Valderfing Beauzains Vaigni Estraye Estival Luneville Fauquemont Sare-Louïs a new Fortress with a Presidial Vandervange the Seat of a Baylwick c. Its Counties are Vaudemont Chaligni Amence formerly the Chancery of Lorrain Mirecourt Remiremont and La Mothe At Remiremont upon the Mosell is a famous Monastery of Canonnesses where Noble Mens Daughters are only received The Abbess is not suffered to leave the Habit but all the Nuns can go out and marry if they please La Mothe was a small Town on the Frontiers of Champaign but being built on a steep Rock washed by a Brook it was accounted impregnable before
Linnen and Leather and of its excellent Knives call'd also by the Name of the Country Coutaux Pergois The Inhabitants having rebell'd against the English the Count of Salisbury took it and caus'd many of them to be hang'd but the French King Charles VII retook it in 1449. It lyes 30 leagues South-west of Paris and almost 22 North-west of Orleance Mortagne Moritolium or Moritonium near the source of the Huisne 8 leagues North-west of Nogent le Rotrou is a goodly Town well peopled and adorned with several Churches It has a Castle and had formerly the Title of a County Perriere is now of little consideration having been ruin'd by the Wars ●e●me Bellismum or Bellissimum sup Castru● is seated on a Brook that encreases the Huif●● la Ferte-Bernard and has near it a Mines Fountain as much esteem'd as those of Poug● and Forges The States of the Province use 〈◊〉 be kept in this Town which has the first Vo●● and is distant 6 leagues from Nogent le Rotrou 〈◊〉 the South-west The Barony of Pontgouin belongs to the B●shop of Chartres and has several Lordships depending on it Conde sur Huisne Condate ad Eg●●nam is of some Consideration and lyes 2 leagu● North of Nogent le Rotrou 2. Perche-Gouet hath 5 Ancient Barronies t● wit Auton Monmirail Alluye Basoche and Brou 3. La Terre-Françoise consists in the Bailiwick of La Tour-Grise upon the River Aure over against Verneuil in Normandy 4. Les Terres ●membrées have the small Countrey of Timera●● the Town of Château-neuf and the Principality and Town of Senonches This little Province is about 18 leagues in length and almost as much in breadth It 's very fertile in Corn and well furnisht with Meadows and Pasture-ground which together with their Forrests and the Manufactures formerly mention'd make the Inhabitants subsist Remy Belleau a Lyrick Poet famous in the last Age was Originary of this Province Perche hath a dependance upon the Generallty's of Orleans and Alençon as to the Court of Exchequer on the Parliament of Paris for secular Justice and for the Spiritual it resorts to the Bishops of Chartres and Seez It had its ●articular Counts the most Ancient of whom ●s named Agombert or Albert in the time of Louis le Debonnaire in the IX Century But ●hey were call'd Counts of Bellesme Alençon or Mortagne and the first who took the Title of Count du Perche was Rotrou II. in 1149 that Country having been before of too little Consideration to give Title to a great Lord. Of Beauce DU Val and several other Geographers comprehend under the Name of Beauce Belsa or Belsia several small Countries as the Territory of Chartres le pais Chartrain that part of Gastinois which is annexed to the Government Orleanois besides Vendosmois Dunois Puisaye proper Orleanois Sologne and the Southern part of Blaisois which make up an extent of 35 leagues North and South from Dreux to Remorentin and above 50 leagues East and West from the borders of Champaign and Burgundy to the Frontiers of Maine being included with Berri and Nivernois on the South Perche on the North Maine and Touraine on the West and Champaign and Burgundy on the East These Countries taken together consist in large and fruitful Plains so very abundant in Corn that they are call'd the Granary of France The Learned Adrian de Valois following Ancient Authors gives to this Province an extent of 15 leagues and divides it into three parts Belsa Carnutensis le pais Chartrain Belsa Dunensis or Dunois Belsa Pitiverensis the Election of Pithiviers To avoid confusion I shall speak first of the County of Chartres or Pays Chartrain which is call'd by some Proper Beauce THis Country is situated between the Isle of France Perche Blaisois and Orleanois The City of Chartres call'd in Latin Autricum Carnutum from the River Autura Eure on which it lyes has a Presidial Seat and Bishoprick formerly suffragan of Sens and now of Paris since the Year 1622. This City is so Ancient that some Authors believed that the Issue of Gomer having pass'd into the Gauls some time after Noah did lay the Foundation of it Others maintain that the Druides and Sarrhonides the Ancient Priests of the Gauls did build it and foretold that a Virgin should one day grow big with Child without the Company of a Man It was this which obliged Pris●ns Governour for the Romans to erect a Temple to that Blessed Virgin with this Inscription Virgini Pariturae or to the Virgin who is to bring forth Thus it was that they ador'd at Athens an unknown God But whatever be of it the People of this Countrey made a long and bold Resistance to the Romans kill'd one Tasgetus tho' he was of the Royal Blood of their own King's because Caesar had set him over them and after that great Conqueror had subdued them he was glad that they would accept of the Alliance of the Romans and keep their Peace The Bishops of this City are thought to be of very Ancient Institution for Solemnis who informed K. Clovis in the Christian Religion is reckon'd its 14 Prelate by Duchesne At least 't is probable that under the French Kings of the first and second Race they were Lords Temporal as well as Spiritual of it if what the same Author relates be true that one Elias the 40th Bishop gave the Revenues of the Abby of S. Pere en Vallée to the Nobility of Chartres and that Hardwin the 50th Prelate was the first who Dismember'd the County from the Bishoprick to enrich a Nephew of his call'd Odo or Eudes I know not whether his Posterity forfeited their Estates but Hugh the Great Father to Hugh Capet the first French King of the 3d. Race being then very powerful in that Kingdom gave this Country together with those of Blois and Tours to a Kinsman of his call'd Theobald the Old or the Tricker His issue in process of time viz. in 1037. acquired the County of Champaign and had been the greatest Lords in France had they not weak'ned themselves by the Portions they gave to Youngest Sons In 1286. Lewis IX bought the County of Chartres from Jane of Chatillon the Heiress of it It has been since united to the French Crown and separated from it several times and now it makes part of the Portion of Monsieur Lewis XIV.'s Brother his Eldest Son bearing the Title of Duke of Chartres This City and Country have under gone several Revolutions for at the end of the sixth Age Thierry K. of Burgundy took it by Storm from his Brother Clotaire In 743. Hunold Duke of Aquitain took Chartres and burn'd it Francis I. erected it into a Dutchy in Favour of Madam Rene● of France Dutchess of Ferrara Anno 911. Rollon chief of the Normans besieged it and Anno 1019. it was almost quite burnt down Anno 1568. the Protestants laid Seige to it under the Reign of Charles IX and would certainly have taken it the Admiral
the curiosity of Strangers This Saint was the first Bishop of it at the end of the second Century he had for his successors many famous Prelates particularly St. Lidoire St. Martin St. Gr●gory of Tours Since I have made mention of St. Martin I cannot forbear this History related by Du Chesne King Clovis soon after his Conversion to Christianity made an Offering of his own Horse to the Tomb of this Saint sending immediately an hundred pieces of Gold to redeem it but when he would mount it the Horse could not go until he had sent five-fold the Mony It seem'd says my superstitious Author as tho' its feet had been fastened to the Ground And so I believe they were or something very like it for I never read in the H. Scripture that God wrought Miracles only on purpose to enrich his Prophets or Apostles at the expences of Kings or People The French Papists have still an extraordinary veneration for this H. Man It were to be wish'd they would imitate his Christian moderation for this good Bishop would never communicate with Idacius and Ithacius who had procur'd the death of the Heresiarch Priscillian The Diocess of Tours is very large being distributed under three Arch-Deacons one of Tours another beyond the Loire and the third beyond the Vienne comprehending twenty great Abbies above an hundred Monasteries twenty Collegiate Churches fill'd up with Prebendaries four hundred Parochial Churches whereof sixteen are within the City Besides the famous Abby of Marmoutier and the fine Church of St. Ma tin on which six Abbotships depend viz. Beauieu Cormeri Villeloin Pruilly Noyers and Chinon But the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan is far much larger for the Bishops of Anger 's and le Mans and the nine Prelates of Brittany are his Suffragans Th●re is a Gate called corruptively la porte Fourgon whose right name is la porte du Roi Hugon King Hugon's Gate Some derive from thence the Nick-Name of Hugonots given to the French Protestants because they us'd to assemble at Night in subterraneous Vaults near the Gates of this City to avoid the rage of their Persecutors and therefore were called Hugonoti Hugonots as tho' they had been Disciples of King Hugon or Huguet This Hugon seems to have been an antient Count of Touraine who repair'd this Gate but it is now look'd upon by the superstitious Inhabitants as a kind of Hobgoblin that goes about the City Walls and beats the Night-Walkers he meets with Others feign a more illustrious original of this name pretending that it was imposed on the French Protestants when the League was most powerful And that as the House of Guise gave p●ivately out to have a better Title to the Crown than the Kings that then were as being descended from Charlemaign so the Leaguers nick-nam d the abettors of the Reformation Hugonots as favourers of the Posterity of Hugh Capet the head of the third Race of the Fr nch Kings However it be the Protestant Religion made at first great Progresses in this City and for this reason it was that it stood firm by the French Kings Henry III. and Henry IV. So that when the Parliament of Paris declar'd for the League the Loyalists that could make their escape r●tir d to Tours and erected there another Court of Justice which cashier'd all the Edicts of the Parliament of Paris tending to prom●te the Rebellion Near St. Martin the Fair is still shewn the Plain whe●e Charles Martel Duke or Generalissimus of the French defeated the Saracens in 726 ki●ling 375000 of their Men with their King Abderame tho' he lost but 1500. But some m●derate and very accurate Authors pretend that there is a mistake or overplus of 300000 in that Calculation Tours has a Bayliwick and Presidial-Seat an Election and a Generality to which those of Amboise Chinon and Loches all those of le Mayne and Anjou and some of Poictou do resort Here was formerly Mony coyn'd that went throughout all the Kingdom whence come still the names of Deniers Sous and Livres Tournois The form of Tours is somewhat oval the streets being long and clean and the Houses cover'd with Slates as well as the Walls of the City Near a Village called Columbiers two Leagues East of Tours is a subterraneous Vault called la Cave Gouttiere or the dropping Cave where the drops of Water freeze and petrifie as they fall along the Walls The cold is here extraordinary in Summer tho' this seems not to be the sole cause of it There is also the House and Castle of Plessis worthy to be seen for the fine Orchards and Gardens belonging to it But as to the Castle of Tours it is old and ruin'd Tours lies twenty five Leagues West of Anger 's and 46 South-East of Paris Amboise or Ambacia situated on the confluence of the Loire and Amasse having a Royal Castle built by Charles the Eighth to distinguish the place of his Birth which was also that of his Death This Town is pretty antient for Gregory of Tours says That Clovis and Alaric had an Interview in the Island nigh Amboise which Island is now within the Town The Normans afterwards ruined it but it was soon repair'd by Fulk III. Count of Anjou and is now a very fine Town tho' not very big The Healthfulness of the Air has oft drawn the French Kings hither and at such a time it was that some French Protestants designing to rid themselves of the Guisards who kept K. Francis II. in a manner Prisoner were discovered in their Attempt and paid for it with their Lives in 1560 Amboise belong'd a long time to the Counts of Anjou as to its Founders or Repairers then it had particular Lords Charles V●I seiz'd it from Lewis Viscount of Thouars c. because he took part with the English Lewis XI Instituted here the Order of St. Michael August 1. 1469. Amboise lies 5 Leagues West of Turs and 9 East of Orleance It seems to owe its first Original to a Bridge of Boats which the Romans made here The Town of Loches Luccae or Lociae is scituated upon the River Indre Nine Leagues South-East of Tours Eustochius fifth Bishop of Tours founded here a Monastery whereof he constituted one Vrsus the first Abbot under the Reign of Alaric King of the Goths L●ches was already a strong Place under the first Race of the Kings of France but Carloman and Pepin Brothers and Generals of the French took and rais'd it in 742. It was since repair'd and fortified with a Castle built on the top of an unaccessible Rock defended with Towers and Bulwarks and being 12000 Steps in Circuit so that it could not be taken by the English This Country was the Patrimony of the first Counts of Anjou there they kept their Prisoners of State But Charles the VII did make his ordinary Residence in it Louis the XI did add divers Appartments to the Castle particularly a dark Dungeon where he kept Cardinal de Balue Prisoner
into this City Latins Syrians and Jews proclaim'd his Praises each in his Tongue whether these different Nations were learned Men or foreign Merchants who inhabited or frequented this Town for the sake of Trade I shall not peremptorily determine tho' the latter seems to me the most probable However it be King Phillip the Fair sounded here an University for the Civil Law in 1312. to which Pope Clement the V. added the Cannon Law in thirteen hundred sixty seven The Scholars are divided into four Nations French Germans Normands and Piccards each of which has its particular Officers There are two common and well furnish'd Libraries This City has also undergone the various fate of War We have already seen how it was rid from the hands of the barbarous Attila In 1417. it stood out a long Siege against the English on behalf of the French King Charles VII The besieg'd were so weak'ned and famish'd that they had resolv'd to surrender themselves to the Duke of Burgundy but the English would not allow of it tho' this Prince was their Ally and then in their Army This refusal may be reck'ned one of the chief causes of the Expulsion of the English out of France as it was the fatal period of the progress of their Arms. For as on the one hand it gave a mighty disgust to this Duke one of the most potent Princes in Europe so on the other the French were not loath to make an advantage of it They set up a young Maid a Shepherdess of about eighteen years who pretending a Revelation to raise the Siege of Orleans and bring the King triumphing into Rheims in order to his Coronation so encourag'd their dis-spirited Army and fright'nd the Enemies that she perform'd her promises assisted by the Valour and Conduct of the famous Count of Dunois but perhaps more by the jealousies rais'd between the English and the Burgundians and then by the Civil Wars of the English The Day of the Raising of this Siege which was the Eighth of May 1418. is still kept as a Solemn Festival in Orleans and a Monument of this Victory has been erected on the Bridge of the City It represents the Bl. Virgin with our Saviour in her Arms as ready to be buried on one side lies King Charles VII upon his Knees and on the other the Virgin of Orleans as they call her now Booted and Spurr'd as a Trooper This Maid was call'd Jeanne d' Arc she was a Native of Vaucouleurs in Lorrain but her Family being Nobilitated by the French Kings had their Name chang'd into that of Lys Flower de Luce in memorial of her Services to that Crown During the Reign of Francis II. in 1560. the Duke of Guise under the pretence of the conspiracy of Amboise disarm'd the Inhabitants of Orleans fill'd the suspected Houses with Soldiers and then brought the young King as triumphing into the City And well he might triumph for he had gain'd his point so far as to cause the Prince of Conde to be sentenc'd to lose his Head But the Death of Francis II. forc'd him to alter his Politicks In 1562. the Protestants under the Command of the same Prince of Conde seiz'd upon this place and the Duke of Guise himself was kill'd besieging it However the Roman Catholicks retook it but La Noue one of the stoutest Commanders the Protestants ever had master'd it again five years after In 1588. it declar'd for the Leaguers by the Intreagues of one Rossieux Secretary to the Duke of Mayenn but it submited to the French King Henry IV. in one thousand five hundred ninety four The Name of Orleans comes undoubtedly from the Latin Aureliani by which the Roman Historians after the second Century do call this City There is still however some remains of the antient appellation of Genabum in a nick-name given to such Inhabitants as have not Travelled abroad viz. Guepin which I am apt to take for an abbreviation of Guenapin Genabinus This City is seated on the steep of an Hill on the Northern side of the Loire that washes its Walls and represents almost the figure of a stretched Bow In sight of the Town and the middle of the River is a pleasant Island cover'd with great Trees and Buildings This Island is joyn'd with a Bridge on one side to the Town and on the other to the Suburb of Pontereau This Bridge has 16 Arches and 't is upon it that the Monument of Jeane d' Arc is erected Orleans is large and well built the Streets are broad strait and neat being pav'd with a small square-stone Some of the Markets are fine spacious and overshadow'd with Trees The most Magnificent Churches are the Cathedral of Sainte Croix and the Collegiate of S. Aignan The body of the former is an hundred foot in length sixty in breadth and one hundred and two in depth It has fifty nine Canons and nine Dignitaries the latter has but thirty one Prebendaries whereof eight are dignify d. Both have been much defac'd during the Civil Wars of Religion but the Cathedral was repair'd by Henry IV. There are twenty two Parochial Churches The town-Town-House has a very high Tower whence the whole City and Suburbs may be discover'd The Chastelet or Pallace of the Justice is also a remarkable Building seated on the River The Town has eight Gates and is fortify'd with a Terrass and surrounded with a Wall defended by 40 round Towers fill'd with Earth Orleans has a Bailywick to which the Royal Seats of Bois-common Chateau-renard Yanville Yevre-le-Chastel La Neufvill-auxe Loges Gien Montargis Clery Meun Baugency Gergeau and Pluviers are resorting that is all Proper Orleanois and a great part of Gastinois But the Generality of Orleans reaches yet farther comprehending all Beauce in its greatest extent that is the Country Chartrain Dunois Vendomois Blaisois Proper Orleanois Gastinois Puisaie and Sologne and having under it the Elections of Chartres Chateau-dun Vendome Blois Baujenci Orleans Pithiviers Dourdan Montargis Gien and Romorantin The Diocess has six Arch-Deaconships whose Titles are Orleans Pithiviers Beausse Sologne Baugenci and Sulli Orleans lies twenty six Leagues North of Paris ●wenty nine West of Auxerre and twenty four East of Tours almost in the middle of the Course of the Loire with a Haven very convenient for Trade which is the cause that the delicate Wines its Soil produces and the excellent Brandies that are made here are easily carry'd to Nants and thence Transported into Foreign Countries Gergeau or Jargeau Gargogilum or Jargoilum was an antient and noble Castle and is still a pretty good Town on the South side of the Loire with a Bridge to pass that River belonging to the Bishop of Orleans four Leagues East of that City In 1420. the Count of Salisbury took it for the English but the year following it was retaken by John II. Duke of Alenson and the Virgin of Orleans who made the Count of Suffolk and several other Prisoners to the number of four
1212. Raimond Count of Toulouse made it side with the Albigenses Simon Count of Montfort storm'd and plunder'd it the English did utterly destroy it and it suffered much during the Wars against the Protestants so that this Town is very different from what it has formerly been though it has yet a very famous Abbey of St. Bennets Order where as 't is said have been near 1000. Monks at once The Abbot is Joynt-Lord of it with the King which was regulated by a Sentence in 1229. c. Of Rouergue ROVERGVE Rutenicus Ager Borders to the East upon the Cevennes to the North upon Auvergne to the West upon Quercy and to the South upon Languedoc It lies between 43 Deg. 30 Min. and 44 Deg. 46 Min. of Lat. and betwixt 22 Deg. 22 Min. and 24 Deg. 15 Min. of Long. So that it takes up 37 Leagues East and West from S. Jean de Breuil to S. Antonin in its greatest length and 28 North and South from Mur de Barrez to Brusquez This Province is divided into three Parts viz. the County the Upper and Lower Marche the chiefest City of the first is Rodez of the second Milhau of the third Villefranche The Country is very plentiful in some places but barren in others There are Mines of Iron Antimony Copper Brimstone Alum Silver and as Strabon says of Gold too The greatest revenue of Rouergue consists in Cattel Wools Fruits Cheeses Hemps and Lines the only Trade of Mules that are bought there for Spain brings in every Year above 200000 Crowns It s Principal Rivers are the Tarn the Lot and the Aveirou It depends on the Parliament of Toulouse and boasts of 25 Towns and 50 great Burroughs 2 Bishopricks and a Elections under the Generality of Montauban There are ordinarily commended Rodez for his People Conques for its Gate Milhau for plenty of Almonds Nerac for Vitriol St. Antonin for Plunis Roquefort for Cheeses Monsalvi for its delicate blew and green Peases Vouse and Espaliou for excellent good Bread the Abbey of Aubrac for its Hospital and Alms Severac for its Castle Marcillac a Principalty for the Cave or den call'd Bouche-Roland that is near it and reaches four Leagues under ground The Inhabitants are both Couragious and Honest The Nobility there is very Generous and much respected by the Common People The City of Rhodez Segodunum or Ruteni is seated on the Aveirou 24 Leagues South East of Cahors and has the title of a County a Seneschalship and Bishoprick Suffragan of Albi. It is very Ancient but it has lost its former Ancient greatness having been often ruin'd by the Goths Saracens French c. The Cathedral is under the name of our Lady there are many others Churches and Monasteries and a fine Colledge of Jesuits Its first Bistop was as 't is believ'd St. Amand. The Counts of this City were of the House of Carlat and possessed that part which is called the Borrough and the Bishops were Master of the other that bears the name of the City The County belonged to the Counts of Toulouse Alfonsius the I. having resolv'd to take the Cross and to make a Journy into the Holy Land sold it in 1147. to Richard Son of Raimond Viscount of Carlat Richard left it to his Son Hughes I. Count of Rodez c. It was afterwards annexed to the County of Armagnac by a Marriage and a Judgment in the year 1312. John I. Count of Armagnac had a Grant of the French King Charles V. in 1375. that the four Juridictions of Rouergue should be Annexed to the County of Rodez which are St. Geniez la Roque-Valsergue Castagnes Begonimez and la Guiole After that all the Estates of the House of Armagnac came into that of Albret and the French King Henry the IV. carried to the Crown the County of Rodez as being the Patrimony of the House of Armagnac There is near that City the Mountain of Cansac which burns in the rain There are Mines of Copper Arsenick Azur and Silver Two Leagues from that Place is an Abyss called Tindoul 60 Paces broad and 200 deep On the side of that Abyss is to be seen a hole without Bottom The City of VABRES Castrum Vabrense is a Bishoprick and County Suffragan of Alby It was formerly a Famous Abby of St. Benets Order which Pope John XXII in 1317. Erected to a Cathedral Church The Abbot Peter Orlageo was its first Bishop It is 12 Leagues South of Rodez MILHAV Amilianum or Aemilianum is the Chief Town of the Upper Marche being upon the Tarn toward the Frontiers of Gevaudan 14. Leagues South-East of Rodez There are a great many Almond-Trees This Town has been famous during the Wars of Religion it being a strong hol'd but is Fortifications were razed in 1629. The Country depending on it is call'd Aemilianus-Pagus VILLEFRANCHE is the Chief Town of the Lower March with a Seneschalship and Presidial 12 Leagues West of Rodez The People is there very Civil and serviceable and provisions plentiful and cheap Saint Antonin lies upon the Confluence of the Aveirou and Bonnete 18 Leagues West South-West of Rodez with high Walls round it In the year 1226. Guy of Montfort yielded to the French King the Right he had on that Town Raimond Count of Toulouse protested against that Gift but in 1229. he approved by an Act of the Arbitrators Sentence pronounced by the Popes Legate and the Count of Champagne upon the Matter So that St. Antonin was adjuged to the Crown in 1245 Besnard Hugonis Son to Frocard Viscount of St. Antonin having sold to the French King Lewis IX what ever Right he had upon it The Protestants had Fortified themselves there but Lewis XIII turned them out of it in 1622. This Town is famous for its Plums There are besides others considerables Places as St. Just Estain Entraigues St. Come St. Geniez the Town and County of Espaliou Severac le Castel la Guiole the Abby of Anbrac c. Of Limosin LIMOSIN Lemovicinus Pagus Borders upon Auvergne to the East upon la Marche to the North part of Poictou Angoumois and Perigord to the West and Quercy to the South It lies between 44 Deg. 52 Min. and 45 Deg. 45 Min. of Latitude and between 21 Deg. 40 Min. and 23 Deg. 20 Min. of Longitude which make from South-East to North-West about 38 Leagues from Port-Dieu on the Frontiers of Auvergne to la Roche-chouart in Angoumois in its greatest length and 24 North and South from S. Priech on the Confluence of the Vienne and Taurion and the Borders of la Marche to Beaulieu on the Dordonne near the Province of Quercy This Country is generally cold and barren there is scarce any good Wine Save in the Lower Limosin and little Wheat but plenty of Rye Barley and Chestnuts of which the poorer sort make bread and because when they first go out of that Country and meet with good bread they eat it most greedily thence bread-gluttons have gotten in French the Sirname of
for the Helvii of Caesar who are rather those of Vivarais and Sanson for the Fleutheres or Heleutheres subject to the Auvergnats as well as those of Quercy Gevaudan and Velay adding withal that the Cambolectri whom Pliny places in Aquitania inhabited the Diocese of Alby and the Cambolectri Atlantici the Diocese of Castres But as he grounds his conjectures upon no certain foundation so they are rejected by De Valois We have already seen that the Tectosages fill'd up all the Western part of Languedoc to the very Cevennes and the Mediterranean Sea and consequently that the Albigeois might well be the ancient Tolistobogii or Trocmi Neighbours Allies or Subjects to the Tectosages I have observ'd in the first part of this Book how the Disciples of Vigilantius spread in Guyenne and Languedoc were for a long time as a Bank that stopp'd the overflowing superstition But when this Torrent grew so strong that this Barrier prov'd too weak God rais'd new Defensors to his Church At the beginning of the XII Century Peter of Bruys a Native of Dauphiné Preached and writ successfully against the prevailing Errors and was happily seconded by Henry a Monk of Toulouse The Papists had recourse to their usual Arms Fire and Sword by which means they both got the Crown of Martyrdom But their Blood prov'd as well as that of the first Christians the Seed of the true Church so that after the Dispersion of Valdo's Disciples about 1160 some of●●em retiring in those parts they were kindly receiv'd The vulgar had so good an Opinion of them that they commonly call'd them les Bons Hommes the Good Men and even Raym●●d the old Count of Toulouse Peter King of Arragon the Counts of Foix Comminges and the Viscounts of Bearn spoused their Cause And as Error and Vice are always timorous so the Popes began to fear that their fatal day was come and publish'd a Croisade against those pretended Hereticks as though they had been Heathens or Mahometans The Albigeois under the Wings of their Lords and Protectors defended themselves almost an Age but at last they were over-pow'red by the number the French King 's catching hold of that opportunity to deprive those petty Soveraigns of their Principalities Then it was that such as had escap'd the Sword in the Field of Battel fell in the bloody hands of the Inquisitors who at long run made an end of them however not so as wholly to root the seeds of the truth out of their heart which sprouted out again when our first Reformers appear'd in the last Age for then the Provinces of Languedoc and Guienne the ancient Seat of the Albigeois produced more Converts than all the others of France taken together We have hardly any Account of the Albigeois then by such as were their sworn Enemies Accusers or rather Executioners so that upon the plain confession of Popish Authors that the Albigeois held almost all the same Doctrines with the Protestants and that they rejected the same Superstitions for which the last are still divided from the Church of Rome we might look as Calumnies some Manichean Tenets ascrib'd to them as to deny the Divinity of the Old Testament to admit a good and a bad Principle c. But to clear these Christian Hero's for ever we have but to observe that the Manicheans having been banish'd the East by the Greek Emperours they first spread themselves into Germany thence they passed into Italy and France where meeting with a People averse from Persecution they readily crept and skulk'd amongst them and the malicious Inquisitors catching some of these Hereticks took hold of this occasion to defame the true Albigeois The R. D. Allix has given such incontestable proofs of these Matters of Fact that I cannot imagine that a Roman Catholick of any sincerity will ever renew such notorious Calumnies ALBY Albia or Albiga Capital of this Country lies upon the River Ta●n 17 Leagues North-East of Toulouse and 14 South-East of Montauban It s Foundation and Antiquity are unknown for no antient Geographer remembers it and the first mention of it that De Valois could find is in an old Notice of the Gaules which puts Civitus Albiensum in the fourth place among the 8 Cities of the first Aquitain though some of latter date name it but the seventh in Order Gregory of Tours testifies that one Salvius was Bishop of Alby under the Children of Clovis and another call'd Sabinus subscrib'd to the Council of Agde in 506. but whether S. Clair a Martyr planted there Christianity and was the first Bishop of that Town is uncertain Charlemaign having erected Aqui●●●● into a Kingdom on behalf of Lewis the Meek his Son establish'd Counts in the Principal Cities who together with the Bishops were to be the young Prince's Counsellours and Aimoin was nam'd the first Count of Alby All these Counts having made themselves Soveraigns during the decay of the French Monarchy the Estate of the Counts of Alby pass'd by marriage into the House of Toulouse and then both returned to the French Kings by the 〈◊〉 I have hinted speaking of Languedoc Alby has been a long time a Suffragan to Bour●●● and one of the richest Bishopricks in France being about 50000 Crowns worth but 〈◊〉 it was made a Metropolitan by Pope ●●cent XI in behalf of Hyacinthe Serroni a Roman Gentleman and the Dioceses of Rodez Castrer Cahors Vabres and Mende detached from Bourges to whose Prelate has been given a recompence of some additional Revenues The Archbishop of Alby is still Lord temporal of that City and the King has but there a Viguier for his Chief Justice The Cathedral under the name of S. Cecile has one of the finest Quires in that Kingdom The other Towns or considerable Burroughs of this Diocese are Pennes upon the Aveyrou Cordes Monestier and Caramous upon the Ceron Pampelone upon the Biaur Gaulene and Valence near the source of the Ceron Tais Maillat Ville-neuve Cajousac Castelnau de Montmirail and Peucelsy upon the Vere Rabasteins l'Isle Gaillac la Bastide de Lenis Lescure and Trebas upon the Tarn on the North side Grioussens Cadelens Denat Albain on the South of that River Lombers on the Assou Realmont on the Dadou c. Gaillac is famous for its white Wines whose Drunkenness is not felt but an hour after the Debauch At Rabasteins was fought a memorable Battel between the Duke of Berri and the Count of Foix in 1381. Castres the second Bishoprick contain'd in Albigeois is seated on the Agout nine Leagues South of Alby and 16 East of Toulouse Both the Town and the Bishoprick are new for we find no mention of the Town in ancient Geographers only the Historians of the Albigenses as Peter the Monk mention it as an illustrious Castle under the name of Castra and as the head of the Country of Albigeois As to the Bishoprick it was erected by Pope John XXII in 1317 instead of the Abby of S. Vincent whose body was secretly convey'd from
p. 201 he says that No-gent-le-Roy is situated on the River Eure betwixt Dreux and Chartres which is true Then he adds Dreux or Drocum is upon the Blaise c. The worst Map in the World might have shewn him that those three Towns are seated on the same River It 's true More●y has lead him into that mistake but what his pardonable in the compiler of a great Dictionary who is ●ir●d out by the length and tediousness of the Work and distracted by the ●ariety of matters is not so in a Geographer Besides that there is a River call'd Baise in Guienne but no River Blaise in all France A Vocabulary of this Authors Faults would make up a small Volume and therefore I shall only add an instance or two more P. 309 he calls twice after Robbe Briancon a Bishoprick Neither Morery nor any other Author that I know of mentions any such thing For the Brianconnois were ever as they are still a dependency of the Caturiges and the Prelate of Ambrun P. 320. He puts after Robbe Serres in Viennois that is in the Northern part of Dauphiné tho it lies in Gapencois or in the South of that Province This as true as what he says p. 17 that at the beginning of this War the French King put 700000 Men in Arms and that he alone has more Religion Merit Glory Revenus and Soldiers then all the Crown'd Heads of Europe together without excepting his dear Ally the Turk The former Description of France being so faulty I let the Reader judg what trouble I have been at in chusing the best and including what ever seem'd to me most essential in the Compass of this Book It is divided into two parts whereof the first is an introduction to the Second a general survey of the whole Country and an explication of several Offices and terms that can scarce be fully unde●stood without it Tho this part be very short yet you will find there several things concerning the French Monarchy and Politicks the power of their Parliaments the state of their Nobility and Gentry the increase of Popery the breaking up of the Reformation the causes that retarded its progress and have altogether eclips'd it in that Kingdom all which is not easily to be met with any where-else The second contains an Historical and Geographical Description of the twelve Great Governments into which France uses to be divided besides Lorraine and the County of Burgundy There I treat of the different Revolutions of Each Government of its ancient Inhabitants of its Gaulish and Latin names and other Antiquities of its borders extent subdivisions Air Climate Fertility Rivers Lakes Mountains natural Curiosities c. I set down the distance of the Capital Cities from Paris or from each other and of the most considerable Towns in each Government from their Capital their Latin names Antiquities Lords and Titles their Civil and Ecclesiastical Government with the several Changes they have undergone their most remarkable Buildings Trade Inhabitants the Great Men they have produc'd their Soyl and Territory c. Books newly Printed for T. Salusbury at the Kings-Arms next St. Dunstan's Church in Fleet-street THe Reformed Gentleman or the English Morals rescued from the Immortalities of the present Age shewing how inconsistent those pretended Genteel Accomplishments of Swearing Drinking Whoring and Sabbath-breaking are with the true Generosity of an Englishman With an account of the proceedings of the Government for the Reformation of Manners By A. M. of the Church of England bound in 8. Price 1 s. 6 d. 2. An Essay against Vnequal Marriages in 4 Chapters 1. The Introduction 2. Against old Persons Marrying with Young 3. Against Persons Marrying without Parents or Friends Consent 4. Against Persons Marrying against their own Consent By S. Sufford in 12's bound Price 1 s. 20. The safety of France to Monsieur the Dauphin or the Secret History of the French King proving that there is no other way to secure France from approaching ruin but by deposing his Father for a Tyrant and Dostroyer of his People Done out of French 12. bound price 1 s. 21. The History of the late great Revolution in England and Scotland with the Causes and Means by which it was accomplished with a particular account of the Extraordinary Occurences which happened thereupon as likewise the settlement of both the Kingdoms under their most serence Majesties King William and Queen Mary with a List of the Convention 8. bound price 5. s. A General and Particular DESCRIPTION OF FRANCE PART I. THE Method I shall observe in this Description is To give at first a General View of this ancient and large Kingdom To speak of its old and modern Bounds and Divisions Of its Soil Inhabitants Government Policy Magistrates Religion c. And then to give a Particular Description of each of its Provinces CHAP. I. Of the ancient and modern Bounds and Divisions of France Of her Mountains Ports Rivers and Forests FRANCE has not changed her ancient Limits to the South West and North seeing as Gallia of old it has to the West the Ocean of Aquitain to the North the British Ocean as far as Calis by which Sea it is divided from England the Mediterranean Sea on the South which is also called the French Sea with the Pyrenaean Mountains that part her from Spain As to her Limits on the East and North-East they are very uncertain especially in this time of War Before the late Conquests it was bounded by the County of Burgundy Elzas the Dukedom of Lorrain and Barrois and part of the Spanish Netherlands viz. the Province of Luxembourg Hainault Brabant and Flanders But at present the French King is Master of all those Countries except of a little part So that his Kingdom has almost recover'd its ancient Limits on that side viz. the Rhine and the Mouth of the Meuse Her Form is almost round and in a manner oval so that she is as broad as long and may be of 25 days Journey in length from Brest to Strasbourg and of as many in breadth from Dunkerque to Perpignan that is 250 Leagues which make about 1000 Leagues in circuit The ancient Galli called Celtae transplanted themselves into Asia where they gave their Name to a whole Country called Galatia Gallo-Graecia or Gallia Minor and now Chiangare being part of Natoly or Less Asia Another Colony of the Gallick Nation having passed the Alpes conquered a good part of Italy which made the Romans to distinguish them into Cisalpins and Transalpins However the Country on this side the Alpes retained the ancient Name of Gallia and falling afterwards under the Power of the Romans was divided by Augustus into four Parts viz. Gallia Narbonensis called also Gallia Braccata because of the Braccae a kind of broad long Coats the Inhabitants wore The other Parts were the Celtick Gallia or that of Lyons the Belgick and the Aquitanick which had all three the common Surname of Gallia Comata because the
in St. Antony's Street Sorbonne is but the first House or Colledge of Divinity at Paris though this Name be sometimes given to the whole University founded by Charlemaign about the Year 791 but since increased and made more commendable by Lewis VII and Philip August It is divided into four Faculties Divinity Law Physick and Arts. This last is the most ancient and composed of four Nations French Picards Normans and Germans Out of their Body is taken the Head of the University called Rector who in publick Solemnities immediately follows the Princes of the Blood and at the King's Burial walks by the Archbishop's Side His Robe of Ceremony is a Purple Gown tyed up with a Girdle that has go●den Hangings and an old fashioned Purse● which denotes his Priority and Power ove● all the Pursers of the University He als● wears a short Purple Mantle lined with a● Ermine-Skin and has a Tribunal compose● of the three Deans in Divinity Law and Physick and of the four Attorneys of the four Nations A new Rect●● may be elected every three Months but h● that is in Office is often continued and ha● such an Authority upon all the Faculties that he may cause all publick Acts to cease● and four times in the year at his Processio● Day actually forbids all Preachers to ascend the Pulpit As to the House of Sorbonne it 's very ancient being founded by Robert Sorbonn St. Lewis's Almoner in 1252 or 1253. This Colledge is one of the most rigorous of Europe none being admitted to the Degree of Batchelor unless he studies three years in Divinity in it after he has been received Master of Arts and sustains nine or ten publick Theses Neither is the Degree of Doctor given to any without going through the Sorbonique Act that holds from Sun-rise to Sun-set the Candidate answering all that time to such as come to dispute against him The Dean of the Faculty is committed to oversee these Theses and each Doctor that Disputes is to have a Crown from the Answerer who must satisfie all their Arguments without any body's Help so that he ought to be an able Scholar and have a strong Purse too Those that are admitted that way take the Title of Doctors of the House and Society of Sorbonne but the others that only of Divinity 's Doctor in the Faculty of Paris As for the Building it 's enough to observe that Cardinal Richelieu has taken care to make it one of the most sumptuous of Paris in enriched it with vast Revenues and a good Library The second House after Sorbonne is that of Navarre founded by Jane Queen of Navarre Soveraign Countess of Champaign and Wife to Philip the Fair King of France Humane Learning Philosophy and Divinity are taught in this House which has the Priviledge of making Doctors as well as Sorbonne There are a great many other considerable Colledges founded by Kings Princes Popes c. which I pass by to speak of that called of The Four Nations founded by Cardinal Mazarin and built over against the Louvre His Design in this sumptuous Building is said to have been to encourage Strangers to come to this Capital of the Kingdom to make them have an Esteem and Love for France use themselves to its Ways and learn its Fashions Of these four Nations are kept Sixty Gentlemen Fifteen from Pignerol for Italy Fifteen fro● Elzas for Germany Twenty Flemings an● Ten Spaniards from Roussillon The Hotel-dieu or Hospital destined fo● the Poor is also very ancient being buil● since the Year 660 and well worth th● seeing It 's very spacious and kept very clean considering the vast number of Sic● always attended there by religious Women that make their Vows in the Hands of the Dean of our Lady-Church Behind the House of these Ladies is a Statue of Stone which most People believe to be that of Esculapius The Hospital of the Quinze Vints or Twenty Score founded by St. Lewis in Memory of the Three hundred Christians that had their Eyes put out by the Saracens ought not to be forgotten That of St. Lewis founded by Henry IV. for those that should be sick of the Plague is renowned for its Building Courts Offices and Fountains That of La Charité kept and served by Fryars of that Name is very neat and the People well attended Besides these there is the Incurable and 25 other Houses for the Sick and Poor The great and little Chastelets are the two ancientest Buildings in that City said to be built by Caesar or at least by Julian the Apostate who called Paris his Delight and well beloved Town now they are Prisons of the Civil Lieutenant and Presidial that keep their Courts there The Palace of Cluni in the Maturins Street where the Pope's Nuncio's generally Lodge deserves to be seen It was formerly Julian the Apostate's Baths and the Water was convey'd thither by Aquaeducts from the little Village of Arcueuil near Paris as may still be seen by some Remains of the Ruines The Bastille is a very strong Castle built above the Gate of St. Anthony It s Form is square with four great Towers that defend it of every side its Ditch very deep and other Fortifications as regular Here Persons of Quality suspected of Crimes against the State are imprisoned and there is a Governour to take care of it The Arsenal built just by the River is a great Building with store of Arms fine Gardens and curious Sets of Elm-Trees the Great Master of the Ordnance has his Apartment and keeps his ordinary Residence there The Town-House built by Francis I. was new built by Henry the Great the Front is extraordinary well worked the Chambers spacious the Pavilions uniform and the Pillars and Clock-Tower magnificent Its Revenues are so great that the King very often orders Payments of vast Sums ●hence They must be able Men that are received Sheriffs here and sometimes the whole Court move to have the Man they like chosen Lord Mayor or Provost of Merchants because the Place is of such consequence and he that has it has so much Authority over the People that he may raise them against whom he pleases The Government of the Town is in his and the four Sheriffs Hands who stand but two years in their Office Besides these there are twenty six Councellors and ten Sergeants that serve the Provost and his Sheriffs with sixteen Quaterniers and their Commissaries and other under Officers to hinder any Disorder or Tumult an hundred and twenty Archers or Watch-men who with sixty Arbalestiers or Cross-bow-men an hundred Arquebusiers or Small-shot-men the Foot and Horse Watch go the Rounds every Night commanded by the Captain of the Watch called the Knight of the Watch Le Chevalier du guet The Town 's Attorney takes the Title of King's Attorney The Company of Wine-Cryers to the Number of twenty four are imploy'd in Funerals and twenty four Salt-Porters that carry the King's Bodies are a sort of other Officers of this
adorned with cast Copper Tr●phies of embossed Work representing th● most memorable Events of that Reig● The Statue is properly a Groupe or a Compl●cation of three Figures namely of the Kin● in his Royal Robes of the Victory behin● him who puts a Crown on his Head an● of Cerberus or the infernal Dog kick'd under the Feet of this Sham-conqueror by the three Heads of which they would signifie the triple Alliance of England Holland and Swede or perhaps the House of Austria The Victory has one of her Feet on a Globe the other in the Air and with her two display'd Wings seems ready to fly There are besides a Hercules's Club a Lyon's Skin and a Helmet so that the whole weighs above thirty thousand though 't is said that it was all made at one Cast On the four Avenues or Sides of the Market are so many Marble-Columns adorned with Bass●-Relievo's of Brass representing this Prince's Actions Upon each of these Pillars is a Lanthorn of gilded Brass where●● Light is perpetually kept to venerate ●is new Idol which is sufficiently denoted ●y this Inscription amongst others Viro im●ortali to the immortal Man Paris as to its Form is rather square than ●ng and divided into three Parts the City 〈◊〉 ancient Town built in the Isle of the Pa●●ce formed by the Seine The new Town ●●lled La Ville which is the Northern or ●●west part of Paris and the University ●hich is the highest They were shut up ●ith seventeen Gates leading unto ten Sub●rbs whereof that of St. Germain likes to ●e a goodly Town but some of their Gates ●ave been demolished These several Parts ●re joyned and communicate together by ●en Bridges most of which are filled with ●uildings Paris lies so convenient that Rouen sup●lies it with what it has occasion of from ●ther Countries and the neighbouring Pro●inces with all Home-Necessaries Besides ●his its Situation is so very advantagious ●hat there is no place in the Kingdom so fit ●or so great a City or such a Court. The Houses generally are high and spacious the Streets kept very clean Fountains wholesome and in great numbers The Air mild and healthful and Provisions cheap so that People may live there and spend much less than what is generally thought Besides these there is another great Convenien●● in that City that Men may go any time 〈◊〉 the Night about their Occasions as safe 〈◊〉 by Day because the Watch are so exa●● that no Thieves or Rogues can scape the●● being Lanthorns very close that give gre●● Light and Chains in every Street to 〈◊〉 drawn up upon such Occasions Physicia● have the Liberty of the Royal Garden 〈◊〉 the Suburbs of St. Victor where they w●● find many rare Simples The Learned c●● visit the Royal Library at the Cordeliers of St. Victor in the Abby of that Name we●● furnished with ancient and curious Man●scripts that of Navarre but especially th●● of the President of Thou that is well looked after and in good Order Besides thes● each Religious House as poor as it is h●● it s own particular Library I shall conclud● this Article by mentioning Val de Grace th●● sumptuous Monastery in the Suburbs 〈◊〉 St. James belonging to the Nuns of St. Be●net's Order and built by the Queen Mothe● Ann of Austria It 's one of the finest Place● of this great City which a famous Poet ha● commended thus Vrbs orbi similis toto celeberrima mundo Musarum sedes Regina Lutetia salve Francigenae tu Metropolis pulcherrima Gentis Hospitio regum grato regis que ministros Excipis reliquas das jura suprema per urbes Towns and Places of Note in the Parisis or the Territory of Paris ON the South Side of Paris entring into the Deanship of S. Cel is the Village ●f Gentilly upon the River Bievre or des Gobelins where the Kings of the first and ●econd Race kept their General States and ●ometimes their Parliaments but it was ●estroyed by the Normans and is now on●y renowned for its many fine Gardens At ●he top of this Village was the Royal Castle ●f Winchester corruptly called Bicestre be●ause in the time of the English it belonged ●o John Bishop of Winchester It has been ●ft ruined and rebuilt King Lewis XIII ●aused there an Hospital to be built for Lame Souldiers who having been transfer'd ●nto another Place it was designed to shut up ●he Beggars of Paris On the South-West of the City in the Castelny of St. Maur are the Villages of Isi where the Goddess Isis was adored Van●●es which was heretofore inhabited by the Water-men of the River Seine and is now ●enowned for its Fountains Gardens and Meadows that furnish Paris with Milk and Butter Arcueuil formerly a Pleasure-House of the Romans whence Julian the Apostate brought Water through Lead-Pipes into his Palace that was built whe●● now is the House of Clugny Farther to the West near the Sein● is the Village of Meudon two Leagues fro● Paris with a strong Castle built upon 〈◊〉 Rock in the middle of a pleasant Fore●● There is a Grotto that affords Water in abundance and is paved with Porphiry spo●ted with White Red Green and sever●● other Colours The Chambers of this Castle built by Cardinal Sanguin under Char●●● IX are adorned with Marble Statues fi●● Pictures of the first Roman Emperors 〈◊〉 Aristotle Cicero Demosthenes c. and upo● one of the Chimneys is a Marble that reflects the Rays of the Light as a Looking Glass The Town of S. Clou Head of a Caste●ny on the West of Paris is situated upo● the Seine about two Leagues from the C●pital It was formerly a Village calle● Nogent and has gotten its present Na●● from Cloüaud or Cloud Son to Clodonir Ki●● of Orleance This Cloud for fear of his cr●el Uncle Clotaire King of Paris who h●● already murthered two of his Nephews r●tired to Nogent where he built a Monast●ry and ended his Life There also die● King Henry III. being stabb'd by James C●●ment a Dominican Fryar The present King Brother has there a very fine House Versailles THIS Royal House about four Leagues Westward of Paris is become of late 〈◊〉 considerable that it deserves a particular ●escription The present King began to ●uild or beautifie it in 1661. It consists ●f the old Castle built by this Prince's Fa●●er of other Buildings of the same Syme●y which he has added for Lodgings and ●f a very stately Pile of Buildings that en●●rons it on the Garden Side The House 〈◊〉 built upon a little height in the middle of 〈◊〉 Valley encompassed with Hills at the ●ottom of them on Paris side begin three ●●e Walks formed by four delicate Sets of ●im the middle Alley being twenty Fa●●oms and the two side ones ten each wide ●hese end at the great Royal Place envi●●ned with very regular Pavilions which ●e Princes and Lords of that Court have ●●ilt there and with the other Houses that ●●rm the new Town This Royal Place
and being despised by Princes and Lords fell to the share of the Knight of the Watch and his Comrades From the top of this Mountain one may have a full sight of Paris Vincennes commonly called Le bois de Vincennes is a strong Castle in a Wood not quite a League off Paris towards the East it 's surrounded with a good Ditch and eight great square Towers for its Defence Philip August raised up a Wall about the Wood in 1185. Philip of Valois begun the Tower or Castle in 1337 which K. John and Charles V. ended Q Mary of Medicis begun the Gallery that is on the side of Paris in 1614 and Lewis XIV added new Buildings to it It s Court is spacious and fair a side of it is the Holy and Royal Chappel dedicated to the Blessed Trinity by King Charles V. in 1379. Here are also the Chains of the Streets of Paris sent thither by Charles VI. to punish that City's Rebellion This Place is so very pleasant by its fine Walks in the Woods about it that several Kings have chosen it to end their Lives in as Philip the Fair Lewis Hutin or the Proud and Charles the Handsome Farther into the Woods is a Convent of Minims surnamed Les bons Hommes which is one of the pleasantest Monasteries that can be seen As for the Castle the Inside is every whit as magnificent as what appears without The Princes of the Blood who were taken in the beginning of the last Troubles of France were confined here as had been several others before them Cardinal Mazarin dy'd at Vincennes in 1661. There is still seen an Oak under which King Lewis IX was wont to render Justice for though he went to Vincennes as to a retir'd Place however that the least Absence should not prove hurtful to the poorest of his Subjects at certain hours of the day he sate at a Table covered with a Carpet and ordered his Ushers and Heraulds t● cry out whether there was any that wante● Justice Thence apparently comes the Frenc● Proverb Mettre une chose sur le Tapis To put 〈◊〉 thing upon the Carpet for to propound a Business St. Maur is a Castle built upon 〈◊〉 Height joyning a pleasant Forest near th● Marn about three Miles off Paris but in imperfect because Francis I. that begu● that Building had not time to finish it ye● its considerable for several Rarities as Francis the First 's Head very well worked i● Copper his Devise a Salamander environed with Lillies and these Words Non deflorebimus isto Praeside istis ducibus Henry IV. gave this House to the Prince of Condé Returning to Paris along the Marne you find a League from that City the Village of Charenton which by some old Ruines seems to have been formerly a strong and considerable Town Between this and the Palace of Conflans was an admirable Echo which repeated Words to ten times with such a Noise and quickness as tho' they had been as many Canon-Shots It 's great pity that the Cloyster which the Carmelites have built there upon the Ruines of a Church have deprived the World of so great a Wonder Some years ago Charenton was yet more famous for the Temple the Protestants of Paris had there to which have at one time or other belonged so many great and learned Men as Aubertin Du Moulin Mestrezat Daille le Faucheur Dre●ncourt Gache Claude I supersede to name ●wo late Ministers one of which was ac●ounted one of the learnedest Men in France ●nd the other one of the Eloquentest be●ause they are both living and in England The Palace of Conflans where Jane Queen ●f Navarre dy'd in 1349 belongs now to ●he House of Villeroy The most considera●le part of it is a vaulted Gallery enriched ●ith a great many Pictures drawn to the ●ife as two Sibylles three Roman Empe●ors four Popes several Sultans and great Commanders especially the famous Scander●eg or Castriot Several Learned Men as ●eneca Scot Thomas Aquinas Platina Guic●iardini c. The Kings of England of Navarre The Dukes of Savoy and of Lor●ain the Families of Valois Bourbon and Nassau all set in gilt Frames and brought ●rom Italy and 21 among the rest out of ●he House of Medicis Three or four Leagues East of Paris ●s the Village of Chelles with a Church founded by Queen Clotilde Wise to Clovis the Great and since repaired and erected into an Abby of Nuns by Queen Baudour Wife to Clovis II. Their Son Clotaire King of France was interred in that Abby in 666 and King Robert had a Palace in the Village Higher up to the North four Leagu● from Paris is the Borough of Gonnesse r●nowned for its Bread and Francis the First Answer to Charles the Fifth's Letter stuffe● with ample Titles for he writ nothing el● but Francis King of France of France an● so to the end of the Page where he p● these Words Lord of Vanves and Gonnes● A Joke not much unlike to that of Hen● IV. who answering a Letter of the Span●ards filled up with Bravado's of the sam● Nature called himself King of Gentilly St. DENIS a pretty Town two League from Paris situated on a Brook called 〈◊〉 Crou in the middle of a fruitful Plain an● full of Game At the beginning it was b● a Country House of the Lady Catulla wh● buried there the Bodies of St. Denis Bisho● of Paris and of Eleuthere and Rustic his tw● Priests beheaded in the Persecution of Decius after the Year 250. For the Fable 〈◊〉 St. Denis the Areopagite coming over in● Gaul to preach the Gospel has been so solidly confuted by Launoy and other learne● Roman Catholicks and French Men too that I need not to disprove it I shall only observe that it has been invented by Hildu● Abbot of St. Denis in the Ninth Century and that though in this and subsequent Ages shrewd and Deceitful Monks gull'd 〈◊〉 much as ever the Ignorant and Credulous Vulgar however this ridiculous Opinion did not want Opposers among the rest ●●e Learned John Scot Erigene who unde●eived the Emperour Charles the Bald. The Church was built by Dagobert I. and ●e Abby founded by the same King who ●ave to the Abbot an absolute Authority o●er all the Inhabitants of St. Denis and such ●hat it extended upon their Lives and For●unes and that they were in a manner his ●laves Moreover he instituted a yearly ●air of four Weeks length to be kept in a ●ield near the Church during which he ●orbad the Merchants of Paris to sell any ●ares or Commodities Charlemaign or●ered that all the Kings and Bishops of ●rance should obey this Abbot that the ●ings should neither be crowned nor the ●ishops ordained without his Leave that all ●is Subjects should pay him a Tax for each ●f their Houses that Slaves who should ●illingly pay it should be put at Liberty ●nd called the Free-men of S. Denis In 834 ●ewis the Meek who had been deposed by ●is Sons had his
For th●● great Warrior had been a long while one of the French Protestants Generals and had maintained them a long time against their Persecutors He has left us Memoirs so extraordinary well written that they will make one doubt whether he could better sway the Sword 〈◊〉 manage the Pen. Guimené near the source of the Elle 15 miles West of Rohan has the Title of a Principality Malestroit lyes upon the River Ouste 17 miles South-west of Rohan The Island of Belle-Isle Calonesus is depend●ng upon this Diocess and lyes about 5 leagues from the Coast and 13 or 14 South-west of Vennes It is about five or six leagues long East and West and three or four leagues broad North and South It has a Port called Sau●on and two or three Castles whereof that which lyes near the Port is somewhat strong This Island is considerable for its Salt-pits and for the Vessels that pass often near its Coast If we were Masters of this Island 10 or 12 light Frigats and as many at our Islands of Jersey or Guernsey could keep in awe all the French Privateers from Dunkirk to Bayonne and then we might really boast our Empire of the Sea Of the Bishoprick of Quimper-Corentin THis Countrey anciently Inhabited by the Curiosolites or corruptively Corosopites reaches 36 leagues East and West about 16 or 18 North and South where it is broadest and but 5 or 6 where it is narrowest The Capital City Ben situated where the River Benaudet falls into the Odder after it s gone round about its Walls is called Quimper-Corentin or Coruoaille The last Name seems to come from our fled Brittains and to have comprehended the Diocess of Treguier As to the first it is composed from the Ancient Name of the Town Quimper or Kemper and that of Corentin its first Bishop established by St. Martin of Tours in the fourth Century Adrian De Valois Not. Gall. p. 291. supposes it to be the Alauna of Aethicus and p. 166 167. the Vagorgitum of Pulomy Capital of the Arvii by reason that he makes them Neighbours to the Aulerci Diab●intes and the Namnetes and that neither he nor Strabo mention the Curiosolita The Sea ebbs and flows into the Port of Kemper and carries thither great Boats The Cathedral Church is a fine and Ancient Building with two great Towers Near the Gate call'd Tourbic is a Tower extraordinary big that formerly was the Towns-Castle Cornouaille called in the Ancient Charters Cornubia or Cornugallia had formerly its particular Counts and has now a Presidial It lyes 4 leagues North of the Sea and 28 West of Vennes Concarneau lyes in a Bay 5 leagues East of Cornouaille and 11 West of Blavet It has an extraordinary strong Castle Quimperlay lyes 7 leagues East of Concarneau and 2 North of the Sea on the meeting of the Rivers Laitta Isotte and another small River It was founded by Alain Coignard Count of Cornouaille Betwixt this Town and the Sea on the East-side are two famous Abbies of St. Bennets Order St. Croix and St. Morice separated by a Forrest Four leagues South-west of Quimper-Corentin are the Towns of Pol-David and Douarnenes near a Bay that bears their Name and is about 4 or 5 leagues deep and 2 or 3 broad Eight leagues North-west of Quimper-Corentin lyes in a Bay the Sea port of Audierne and 4 leagues farther the Isle of Sain Samnis or Sena remembred by Mella because of an Oracle of the Gaulish Mercury that was in it Chasteau-lin● is a considerable Burrough upon the River Aufen 7. leagues North of Quimper-Corentin and 6 North-east of Douarnenes The whole Countrey is mighty full of Woods and well watered with Rivers Besides the Abbies already mention'd you have there Langonet of St. Bennets Order Coetmaloen of Cisteaux or Cisternian Monks Bonrepos of Cisteaux too according to Du Val or of Premontré a sort of Austin Fryars according to Sampson Of the Bishoprick of Treguier THe Inhabitants of this Diocess make part of the Ancient Osismii who took up besides the Diocesses of St. Pol de Leon and St. Brieux and 't is not easie to determine whether of them is Vorganium accounted by Ptolomy the Capital of that People This Countrey lyes on the Sea-coast and is now but 12 leagues broad and long being included between the Bishopricks of St. Brieux Quimper-Corentin and St. Pol de Leon. The Capital Town call'd Treguier or Lantriguet is situated on the mouth of a Bay almost 11 leagues North-west of St. Brieux Its Bishop takes the Title of Count and the first is esteem'd to be an English man called Tudwal under whose Name the Cathedral Church is dedicated but this Town having been since ransack'd several times by the Saxons Danes and Normans we find no mention of its Prelates in History till the Year 1175. The famous Lawyer St. Yves who lived under the Reign of the French King Philip the Fair and having been related into the number of the Saints has been taken by the French Lawyers for their Patron was a Native of this Town Guingamp upon the River Trieu 8 leagues South-east of Treguier is the Capital of the Dutchy and Peerdom of Ponthievre erected by Charles IX in 1569. and an Ancient Lordship of the House of Estampes issued by Alliance from the Dukes of Brittany Lannion lyes upon the small River Loquet 2 leagues from the Sea and 5 South-west of Treguier A mile North-west near the same River are the Ruines of an Ancient City call'd in Brittish Cozqueoudet which is esteem'd by some the Civitas Osismiorum of the Latins and suppos'd to be demolish'd by the Danes Morlaix Mons Relaxus situated upon a Hill between two Vallies on a River of that Name is a considerable Town with two Suburbs several Churches a Town-house and an Hospital that is esteemed one of the finest Buildings in the Province It has also a good Haven into which the Tide brings up great Boats and Vessels of a hundred Tuns great Merchant-men lye at Anchor at the Bull-Fort or Fort du Taureau which is built in an Island 3 leagues Southwards This Town is renown'd for its Trade in Hemp Line and Linnen On the top of the Hill are to be seen the Ruines of an Ancient Castle Three miles South of Treguier lyes a Burrough call'd La Roche-Derrien famous for that Oliver of Clisson Father to the High Constable of that Name was Captain of it Of the Bishoprick of St. Pol De Leon. THis Countrey was under the Jurisdiction of the Osismii as I have already observed tho' Caesar gives to its Inhabitants the distinct Name of Lemovices which in process of time degenerated into that of Leonenses It s the most North-western part of Brittany but at present not above 18 leagues long and 8 broad The Capital St. Pol de Leon or Leondoul is an Ancient Bishoprick founded under the French King Chilprick I. in the sixth Century and its first Prelate was one Paul who has left his Name to the Town The
Co●quests in Italy In the Year 160 from t●● building of Rome Elitovius chief of the Peop●● of Maine and their Prince Belovesus made 〈◊〉 Eruption into the North-eastern part of Ita●● whence they drove the Natives and th● built the Cities of Bresse Verona Trent C●●● Bergemo Mantoua and many others Thus is that the Poet John Baptist Ignatius expr●●seth himself in their Favour Cenomanique acres non ignobile semen c. This Province was subject to the Gauls t●● Romans the Francks and the English In t●● middle of the eighth Century Pepin Head 〈◊〉 the second Stock of the French Kings gave th● County with 12 others to his Brother Gris● or Grippon But the Names of the succeedi●● Counts are not known till Hugh I. in 1020. 〈◊〉 fell by Inheritance to our K. Henry II. but 〈◊〉 confiscated by the French Monarchs upon o● K. John under pretence of the Murther of A●thur of Brittany Since that time it has bee● several times detatched from and reunited ●gain to the Crown of France In 1674. Le●●● XIV made bold to give it as an Appanage o● Portion to one of his Bastards call'd Lin●● whom he had got on the Wife of the Mar●●●● of Montespan bestowing upon him the Ti●e 〈◊〉 Duke du Maine and the Charge of Colonel Ge●eral of the Switzers The City of Mans or le Mans in Latin Ci●tas Cenomanorum Suindinum or Subdinnum is ●●tituted upon the Confluence of the Sarte and ●e Huisne having the Title of a Bishoprick ●●ffragan of Tours It is said that this City was ●uilt by Sarrhon Grandson of Samothes K. of the ●auls and being afterwards ruined by the Druides ●nd the Sarrhonides whilst they contested for it 〈◊〉 was rebuilt by Lemant King of the Gauls who ●ive to it his Name However it be for this ●ccount is look'd upon as fabulous le Mans is 〈◊〉 very Ancient City And in Charlemaign's time ●as one of the most flourishing in the Celtick Saul but the incursions of the Normans and ●he War with the English have much abated of ●s former Grandure It is now built upon a ●ountain which is raised up high beyond the ●irte between the North and the West and as a Bailiwick and a Presidial Seat with a Ca●●edral Church under the Name of St. Julian ●ho is esteem'd the first Bishop of it The ●rench Kings by a Prerogative of their Crown ●e Canons born in this Church It 's observed ●●at the English during the Siege they laid to ●is City in 1425 were the first who made use ●f great Artillery in France Mayenne-la Juhel Meduana has its Name ●●om the River Mayenne upon which it is seat●d and from the Lord Juhel who liv'd under ●he Reign of Philip August It lyes not far from 〈◊〉 Frontiers of Normandy being distant from le ●●●s about 18 leagues towards the North-west 〈◊〉 a Town very agreeable with the Title of a Dutchy under which Charles of Guise beca●●● so famous during the Wars of the Leag●● whereof he was Head In 1661. Cardinal M●zarin bought this Dutchy from the Heirs o● that House to give it in Portion to his N●●● Hortensia Mancini Marry'd with Armand Char●● de la Porte Duke of Mazarin it had before the Title of a Marquizate Laval or Laval-Guion Vallis-Guidonis is upon the River Mayenne in lower Maine about 〈◊〉 or 7 leagues from Mayenne towards the South It has the Title of a County and belongeth t● the House of la Trimouille it is famous fo● the fine Cloth which is made there as als● for a Council which was held there A●● 1242. La Ferté Bernard Firmitas Bernardi a Bar●ny is situated upon the River Huisne bei●● distant from le Mans about 9 or 10 leagues towards the East and the Frontiers of Perc●● there is a seat of Justice which resorts immediately to the Parliament of Paris It ga●● Birth to Robert Garnier who at the end of th● last Age before Tristan Mairet and P. Corneil● arose was accounted the Prince of the Tragi●● Poets amongst the French The Territory ●bout this Town is call'd by the Latin Autho● of the French Affairs Ager Firmitatensis Sablé a Marquizate is situated near the S●●● between the little Rivers of Vergete and Er●● about 10 or 11 leagues from Mans towards 〈◊〉 South-west Beaumont le Vicomte is a fine Tow● with the Title of a Dutchy it lyes upon 〈◊〉 Sarte 6 leagues North of Mans and 5 South 〈◊〉 Alencon Raoul who was Lord of it Ass●●● Anno 1093. at the Translation of the Reliques of St. Julian the first Bishop of Mans. Chateau du Loir a Barony is situated upon the River Loir in the Frontiers of Vendomois distant from le Mans about 8 or 9 leagues to ●●wards the South-east There are other places of some Note as Lavardin Villaine-la-Juhel Gesvres Vibray Vassé Ballon and Galerande that are Marquizats Brulon Suze and Belin are Counties Bresseau is a Viscounty and S. Suzanne is a Barony Of the Country of Perche or Le Perche LE Perche hath Normandy on the North 〈◊〉 Maine to the West Vendomois and Blais●● on the South and towards the East it hath Beauce This Country seems not to have bee● known to the Ancients the reason of which I imagine to be that the middle-part of it was all cover'd with Woods and the borders belonged to the Neighbouring Nations And therefore it was that an Anchoret whom Posterity has since venerated under the Name of St. Avy S. Avitus retsred into these Forrests as into a wide and impenetrable Solitude The Country was yet for the most part Woody at the beginning of the third Race of the French Kings about 700 years ago and call'd for that reason Perticus Saltus the Forrest of Pearches perhaps because it consisted in great part of Fir-trees or other long and even Wood. And you may observe by the reading of the Latin Authors of the French History how they were fell'd down and the Country peopled by degrees which however is still Woody enough It s therefore labour lost to look for its Ancient Inhabitants since there were none for the Ilnelli and the Aulerci Diablintes were an Armo●ick Nation who seem'd to have dwell'd the ●irst in the Western Coasts of Normandy and the ●ast on the Southern of Brittany Le Perche is divided into higher and lower ●he higher part is the County and the lower ●s call'd Perche-Gouet or rather it 's divided in●o Grand Perche Perche-Gouet from the Name of its Ancient Lords Terre Françoise or French Country and Terres Démembrées or Dismember'd Lands 1. Grand-Perche contains Nogent-le Rotrou Mortaigne Bellesme Perriere the Barronies of Loupe Illiers Courville and Pontgoin Nogent le Rotrou Novigentum Rotroci or Rotroldi so call'd from Rotrou its Founder Count of Perche is seated upon the Huisne where it receives the Ronne and is the Capital of Upper Perche tho' it be commonly accounted a Burrough but one of the finest and richest in France by reason of its Manufactures of Serges
of Chatillon having defeated la Valette who came to relieve it and the Duke of Anjou not daring to ventu●e a Battle against that great Captain But the Protestant Nobility lured with the fair promises of Liberty of Conseience by that entreaguing Princess Katherine of Medicis rais'd voluntarily the Siege whereupon ensued the short Edict of Pacification at Longjumeau Ever since Chartres followed the party of the League till Anno 1591. Henry ●he Great took it and was there Crown'd and Anointed King of France the City of Rheims still persisting in its Rebellion If you ask whether they took Consecrated Oyl to perform that Ceremony Du Ker●●er will answer you that there is another holy Ampull or Vial kept at Marmoutier an Abby near Tours for that purpose and that the Oyl of that Vial is no less Sacred than that of Rheims The River Eure divides Chartres into two inequal parts which lye partly on a Valley of difficult Access and partly at the end of a large Plain the Streets are generally narrow as ●t uses to be in Ancient Towns the Houses ho●eve● are fine the Walks pleasant and the Churches Magnificent The Cathedral dedicated to the Holy Virgin is very considerable its Quire the Church under ground and its 2 Steeples are the Admiration of all Strangers The Chapter hath 72 Canons 17 whereof are Dignitaries among whom are 6 Archdeacons viz. of Chartres Blois Dunois Vendome Dreux and Pincerais 4 Provosts namely those of Ingre Normandy Mesange and Anet In this Diocess are reckon'd 30 Abbies 257 Priories and more than 1300 Parishes the Churches of St. Julien and St. Agnan are very fine In a word 't is one of the biggest and richest Diocesses of France comprehending four other Cities the heads of so many Countries each of which might conveniently enough be made the Seat of a Bishop viz. Blois Chateaudun Vendome and Dreux if we believe De Valo●s In the City it self are 3 Abbies viz. those of St. Josaphat St. Pere en Vallée and St. Cheron besides many other Religious Houses Several considerable Manufactures are made at Chartres by reason of the waters of the River Eure which are esteemed very proper for that purpose This City lyes 14 leagues North-west of Orleance and 16 South-west of Paris Nogent le Roi is situated upon the Eu●e 5 miles South of Dreux and 9 North of Chartres It 's call'd Novigentum Regis because as some say King Philip VI. dyed here or as others pretend because it was given by one Isaselle to K. Philip August Dreux Durocassae Carnutum and corruptively Drocae and Drocum lyes also upon the Eure 13 miles North of Chartres on whose Bishop it depends as likewise on the Governour of Orleanois tho' as to the Exchequer its Election resorts to the Generality of Paris It has the Title of a County and the precedency of Chartres in the Assembly of the General States it being one of the Ancientest Cities in the Kingdom Nay if we believe the suppositious Berose it was built Anno 410. or thereabouts after the Deluge by Drius IV. King of the Gauls and Founder of the Druides So much at least is sure that these Druides who were together the Priests the Teachers the Judges and the Physicians of that Nation kept here their Assemblies as esteeming this Place blessed and holy and the middle or Center of Gaul Here also it was that they gather'd the Misletoe from the Oaks with many Ceremonies after the solemn Sacrifice of two young white Bulls on the sixth day of the Moon the Priests cutting the Shrub with a Gold Sickle and the People receiving it on white Cloath For those crafty fellows made the Vulgar believe that the Misletoe was an heavenly Gift a Soveraign Remedy and preservative against all Diseases Robert Son of Lewis the Burly had the County of Dreux given him Anno 1137. when he marryed the Widdow of Rotrou Count of Perche He is the Stock of the Counts of that Name and the Dukes of Brittany descended from him His Grandson Peter of Dreux having married Guy Alix Heiress of that Sovereignty in 1250. About the end of the twelfth Century our K. Henry II. and his Son Richard burn'd this Town and Vendome because Count Robert of Meular their Kinsman and Vassal had made Homage of his Lands to the French K. Philip August This Town is likewise famous for the Battle which the Roman Catholicks gained over the Protestants Anno 1562. in which the Generals of both Parties the Duke of Monmorency Lord high Constable of France and the Admiral of Coligny were made Prisoners Gaillardon Galardo is scituted upon a little River which emptieth it self into that of Eure 3 leagues and a half from Chartres to the North-East It 's remarkable for the Birth of St. Hildeburg whose Life has been not many years since published by Don Luke d' Achery Espernon Sparno lyes 5 leagues North-East of Chartres and 5 Miles East of Nogent le Roy. It has a Priory under the Name of St. Thomas but is much more famous for having been erected into a Dutchy and Peerdom in 1582. by the French King Henry III. on behalf of John Lewis of la Valette Nogaret whom he rais'd to the highest Dignities in that Kingdom and mad● him his chief Favourite Bonneval is scituated on the Frontiers of Blaisois in a fruitful Soil where the Loir receives the Mesuve 6 Leagues and a half South of Chartres There is a famous Abby of Benedictines of which one Arnauld an intimate Friend of St. Bernard was Abbot in the 13th Century Maintenon Mesteno 7 Miles North-East of Chartres and 3 South-East of Nogent le Roy upon the River Eure is now famous for giving the Title of Dutchess to the Widdow of the Poet Scarron Fransoise d' Aubigne the principal She-minister of State and Cabinet Counsellor of Lewis XIV There are some other Towns or considerable Burroughs in this County as Auneau Ouerville Voves Viabon c. In 1682. the Duke of Guise defeated the Germans near Auneau Of Vendomois VEndomois Vindocinensis or Vindusnensis Pagus hath Perche on the North Maine on the West Touraine on the South and Blaifois on the East Here is especially remarkable Vendome Vindocinum Castrum situated upon the Loir and the Capital of Vendomois with the Title of Dutchy and Peerdom erected by Francis I. in 1514. on behalf of Charles of Bourbon Father of Antony of Bourbon and this of Henry IV. During the first Race of the French Kings this Country made part of the Kingdom of Orleance and was since possest by the Counts of Anjou In 1342. Godfrey Martel one of them built here the Abby of the Holy Trinity after he had overcome William Count of Poictiers and Conquer'd from him the City of Saintes He fill'd it with Benedictine Monks and presented it with a pretended Tear of our Saviour said to have been wept on the Grave of Lazarus The Popes who never fail'd of gratifying the Monks at the Expences of the
Columbine call'd by the French Ancolie and by the Languedocians Eglantine the second i● a Mary-gold and the third a Violet The institution of those Games is variously reported ● some ascribe it to a great Lady call'd Clemence Isaure who bequeathed the greatest pa●t of her Estate to the Town-house upon that account and whose Statue of white Marble is yet to be seen in the great Hall but the Registers of Toulouse attribute it to seven Noble-men in 1324. Howsoever it be this Solemnity is not only laudable but even worthy to be imitated by Princes Commonwealths and great Cities for besides that it would give an honest diversion and emulation to the ingenious it would be as a Touch-stone to know the several degrees and abilities of understanding Men for extraordinary Poets are for the most part uncommon Genius's and might successfully be employ'd in weightier undertakings Toulouse is divided into two parts by the River Garonne and into 8 Wards in reference to its 8 Capitouls The first is the Daurade so call'd from a very ancient Church under the name of our Lady that was formerly a Temple of the Sun This Precinct comprehends several Churches Monasteries and Colleges the Pest-house and the Suburb of S. Cyprian with the great Hospital of S. James The second Ward bears the name of S. Stephen the Metropolitan Church built in a great Market adorn'd with a fountain upon which is rais'd a fine Obelisque In 1609. this Church was all burn'd except that part which is call'd the Cloyster and has 'till some Gothick Statues of half emboss'd work It has since been rebuilt statelier than before with a great and high Tower wherein hangs the Bell Ardaillac which is so very big that they dare not ring it lest the Belfrey should fall besides 14 vaulted Chappels round about the Quire There are also the Archbishop's Palace the Town-house or Capitole adorn'd with the Pictures of the Entries of the French Kings within Toulouse and of the Capitouls in their Robes the Arsenal the Chappels of the white and blew Penitents with several Churches Convents and Colleges The Old-Bridge gives its name to the third Ward and is but a course piece of Building worthier of the Goths than of the Romans The New-bridge which is far finer doth hardly yield to that of Paris and no wonder since it was begun in 1544 and but ended about the middle of this Age. In this Precinct are the Exchange the Court of the Provost and Consuls of Merchants and the Cage wherein Blasphemers are included to be drown'd into the Garonne The fourth Ward call'd La Pierre or the Stone has nothing considerable The fifth takes its name from the Church Dalbade enjoy'd by the Fathers of the Oratory since the year 1620. There are besides the Inquisition a place well known by the cruelties against the Albigeois near which is a round Castle esteem'd by Du Chesne to be a remainder of the ancient Capitole the Island S. Antony form'd by the Garonne and inhabited by Handicraft-men The sixth Ward call'd S. Pierre des Cuisines has among other Churches and Monasteries that of the Franciscans sirnamed Observantins which exceeds all the rest in bigness and sumptuosity but is especially renowned for a Cave which consumes Dead-bodies without anointing the Skin and displacing the Joynts Here is the University with the College of Foix founded by Peter Cardinal of Foix and endow'd with two Libraries one of Mss and the other of Printed Books that of Narbonne founded by Gambert Archbishop of Arles and Narbonne in 1342 that of L'Equille begun in 1561 and ended 1608 at the expences of the Town for teaching the Hebrew Greek and Latin Tongues Here are also the Mills of the Basacle whose Workmanship is esteem'd one of the greatest curiosities of Toulouse This place in Latin Vadaculum that is small foord gives likewise its name to a Bridge and a gate hard by the Castle The seventh Ward call'd S. Bartholomew has the Castle Narbonnoise which was the ordinary Residence of the Counts of Toulouse and a very strong place before K. Charles VII Now it is the Palace of the Parliament with the Hall of the Pleas the Marble-Table the Prisons call'd Hauts-murats the Court of the Exchemier and the Mint where Money is coyn'd and mark'd at the Letter M. The eighth Ward under the name of S. Sernin or Saturnin an ancient Collegiate Church defended by Guns at the top of it so plac'd that none of the many Pillars which underprop the Building can cover a Man from their Shot This they do because of the great Treasure that is included in this Church for there are above 50 Silver-skreens wash'd over with Gold besides the Jewels and Church-ornaments Here are the Tombs of the ancient Counts of Toulouse of its Prelates and Nobility Five Miles North-West of this City lies the Village or Lordship of Pibrac which I mention here for having giv'n its name to a Toulousan Gentleman Gui du Faur Lord of Pibrac President of the Parliament of Paris and Ambassador of France to the Council of Trent and then to Poland under Charles IX and Hen. III. He has left several loose Discourses and pieces of Poetry but the most renown'd are his Moral Quatrains which for their brevity majesty and if I may so speak sententiousness may still challenge the first place among all which has been written in this kind by uninspired Men. It appears by several passages of this golden Book that the Author was not at all addicted to the Superstitions of Rome though he never publickly embraced the Reformation no more than divers other Great and Learned Men of his time who seem'd to approve of the Doctrine but did not like the manner of propogating it Seven Miles South-west of Toulouse lies the Village of Plaisance so call'd from the goodness of its Air Soyl and Situation Adrian de Valois supposes it to be the Vernus Sol of Aethicus but I rather take it for a place call'd Vernouse which lies just 15 Italian Miles South-west of Toulouse as the Vernus Sol of that Geographer I find nothing considerable of the other places of this Diocese as Montoriol Vieille Toulouse S. Jori Columiers Castel-moron Ville-Longue Ville-neuve Montagut Montgaillard Verseuil Lenta Carmain with the title of a County Of the Diocese of Montauban MOntauban Mons Albanus is one of the 6 Bishopricks of Pope John XXII's erection It was formerly a Monastery founded by Theodard Archbishop of Narbonne and when it was made a Cathedral the Abbot Bertrand du Puy was the first Bishop of it As to the Town it was but at the beginning a very strong Castle which in process of time increas'd into a considerable City by the fertility of its Soyl and the conveniency of its Situation upon a Hill and the Rivers Tescounot and Tarn on the high way from Toulouse to Limoges and thence to Paris It was built or repair'd in 1144 and united to the French King's Domesne in 1171
down his Statues while he was at Rhodes and before he ascended the Imperial Throne Adrian ‖ Ael Spartian rais'd here a famous Basilique in honour of Pl●tina Wife to the Emperor Traian who had much contributed to his Adoption * Jul. Capitolin Antoninus Pius was originary from thence by his Father's side In the decay of the Western Empire the Goths conquered Nismes with the rest of Septimania and it then lost a great part of its lustre but suffer'd much more by the devastations of Attila of the Saracens and afterwards of Charles Martel who though he put it in Flames was not able wholly to destroy all the Monuments of the Roman magnificence Notwithstanding these misfortunes † Adrian Vales Nismes was so soon repair'd that under Lewis the Meek it was again a rich and wealthy City thick inhabited wall'd in and fortify'd with Towers so that during the weakness of the French Monarchy in 1129 the Governors of Nismes usurp'd the Sovereignty of it under the Title of Viscounts whose Estate was at the end of that Century devolv'd to the Counts of Toulouse and from them returned to the Crown of France In 1569 the Protestants seiz'd upon this City by the courage of a shrewd and venturesom Soldier who during the Night fil'd at several times the Bars of the Grate by which the Fountain of Nismes enters into the Town Since it was yielded to them by Henry IV. as one of their Towns of security which they enjoyed till Lewis XIII dep●ived them of it However they still kept some of their privileges as to have one half of the Consuls and of the Regents or School-masters of the Royal College Founded by Henry II. of their Religion but Lewis XIV has by degrees taken from them not only the small remains of their Liberties but even their Temples and the free exercise of their Religion The most remarkable remains of Antiquity in Nismes are its Amphitheatre the Square-house or Maison quarrée the great Tower or Tourre-magne the Fountain Nemausus and the Temple near this Fountain The Amphitheatre call'd by the Inhabitants Les Arenes is now but an Oval-Wall of 470 Steps with 63 Arches built up of very la●ge Stones without Mortar or Plaister which however has not only withstood the ransackings of the Goths and Saracens but even the Flames of Attila and Charles Martel as appears by the black colour they are tainted with Notwithstanding one may still discern the Figures of Remus and Romulus suckling a She-wolf the Vultures that appeared to these Founders of Rome two Bull-heads upon the ancient Gate of this Building and two Towers upon the new Gate The Seats whence the Spectators saw the Shews have been remov'd from thence and the Caves where the wild Beasts were kept are now fill'd up with Earth Nay the whole capacity of the Amphitheatre is taken up with Houses at least since the year 1179 as may be prov'd by Patentees granted by the Viscount Bernard Atten where the Inhabitants of Nismes and those of the Arenes are distinguish'd which shews that this City has not been rebuilt where it formerly stood for anciently the Amphitheatre was without the Town and Warriors have oft made use of it as of a Fort or Cittadel The Square-house La Maison quarrée is a kind of Parellelogramme or long Square being 74 Foot in length and 41 Foot 6 Inches in breadth It s front is adorned with 6 Columns and each side with ten The top is flat and cover'd with square Free-stones extraordinary large so that one may walk upon it without any danger As we do not know who rais'd the Amphitheatre we are not better acquainted with the Founder of this House nor to what use it was fitted For its form which has no likeness at all with the antient Basilicks does not allow us to take it for that magnificent Building rais'd up by Adrian neither is the vulgar name of Cap-dueil sufficient to make a Capitole of it since no antient Author speaks of a Capitole of Nismes But as its front has a great resemblance with those of the antient Temples one may believe with the Learned Spon in his curious inquiries of Antiquity that it was a Temple dedicated to Jupiter Capitoline Without the Walls of the City upon the top of a high Hill rises an antient Building call'd by the Inhabitants Tourre-Magne the great Tower because of its prodigious height or that it exceeded by far all the Towers round about For by the remains it seems to have been a Watch or Tower built in the form of a Pyramide at one of the Corners of its antient Walls One may still distinguish the Stairs whereupon they ascended to the top and the Niches or Case-frames wherein they plac'd the Statues of their Gods The whole Fabrick is of small square Stones so well cemented together that the most industrious Mason should not throw down two Foot of it in a day At the Foot of that Hill springs a most clear and pleasant Fountain in the form of a Pond with a Whirl-pool in the middle wherein if any Creature chance to fall it is never to be seen again This spring is the Source of the Vistre so call'd from the brittle and transparent colour of its Water an Epithete given it by Ausonius Vitrea non luce Nemausus A branch of this Fountain runs through a Channel purposely drawn into the City As to the course of the Vistre you may see it in the Rivers of Languedoc Near this Fountain is an old Square-Temple under-propt by two rows of Columns with their Bars Chapters Architraves Frizes Cornishes and Mouldings all in a just proportion together with Niches or Case-frames and round Windows in the Walls for the Statues of their Gods and Eagles of emboss'd Work whose Heads have been broken off by the barbarous Goths Huns or Saracens in contempt of the Romans This Temple has been turned into a Monastery of Nuns and because of the Eagles and other marks of its former magnificence I should be apt to take it for the Basilick of Adrien rather than the square-Square-house or any other antient Building To avoid length I shall not mention the many Statues and Inscriptions that are found in this City nor insist upon the Monuments of newer date as the Wine-Tower La Tour Vinatiere so call'd Because built out of an excise upon Wine Mont-pouzieu in the inclosure of the Monastery of S. Bauzille is a Hill of Clay that formerly was the burying-place of the Jews for which they us'd to pay a certain quantity of Pepper to the Monks The King's Castle the Column erected at the entry of Francis I. with a Salamandre upon it the Clock-Tower the Crown-gate with its Bulwark and the Palace of the Presidial are considerable Buildings Sulpice Severe mentions a Council held at Nismes in 389 but does not name the Bishop of it The first of whose subscription we read is Gilbert of Nismes who assisted at a Synod
Italian Poets ascribe to their Troubados or Trouveres the invention of Rythm'd Poetry and they make still indifferent good Rythms in their Country Language The Protestants have not been ve●y many in PROVENCE since the barbarous Murther committed on the Vaudois of Merindol and Cabrieres When I liv'd there that is 15 years ago they had but 7 or 8 Churches which are since destroy'd with all the others of France In those days they already complain'd of their exorbitant Taxes with a very expressive Proverb Lou Languedoc is ruinad La Prouvence es accoumencade The ruin of Languedoc is finished and that of PROVENCE is begun but now I believe they have but little reproach one another PROVENCE is divided into Upper and Lower The Upper lies on the North side of the River Durance Verdon and Esteron nearer to Dauphiné and the Lower on the South side along the Sea-coast but lest I should forget some part of it I shall treat of each Diocese after one another and begin with Aix the Capital Of the Diocese of AIX THis Diocese is included betwixt those of Marseille Arles Apt Riez Frejuls and Toulon and is the biggest of all reaching 26 Leagues East and West from beyond Cotignac near the Diocese of Frejus to the Plains of la Crau and about 10 North and South This Country was anciently inhabited by the Salians Salyes Salyi or Saluvii and 't is in this Territory that C. Marius gave a total overthrow to the Cimbres killing 150000 of them The City of AIX Aquae Sextiae or Aquensis Civitas is within a Musket-shot of the little River Arc 5 Leagues of Provence North a Marseilles It is very Ancient Caius Sextus a Proconsul carried thither a Roman Colony in 632 of Rome and made the warm Bathes from which it draws its name though the Bathes be not longer in being It is graced with an Archbishoprick a Parliament a Court of Accounts a Court of Aydes the first Seat of the Seneschal of Provence a Generality a Chamber of Mint a Lieutenant General of the great Seneschal of the Province an Ordinary Judge for the Town and another for the King called Viguier besides an University for the Law and Physick it has been plunder'd by the Longobardi and Saracens in the 4th and 7th Centuries The Counts of Provence who lived there did inlarge it but 't is much altered for the better upon all accounts since that time and is one of the pleasantest and best built Cities in France S. Saviour is the Metropolis where is a high Hexagon Tower to be seen the Font is of an admirable Structure and all of white Marble supported by fufile Columns round about like a Dome The Chappel of our Lady of Grace is very rich and that of S. Maximin very Ancient and Holy The Chapter consists of a Provost an Archdeacon a Capiscol a Sexton a Penitentiary and 15 Canons there are also some Incumbents or Prebendaries and a most delicate Musick two other Parishes viz. S. Magdalen and the Holy Ghost divers Monasteries and a College of Jesuits S. Maximin above 9 Leagues East of AIX is the Seat of a Baily but much more famous for a pretended S. Ampulla and the Body of S. Mary Magdalen said to be kept here in a Collegiate Church serv'd by Dominican Fryers Many amongst us would rather chuse the Case than the Relick for the Case is all of pure Gold being the figure of a Woman held up by two Angels and Crown'd with a golden Crown enriched with Diamonds whereas the Relick may be for ought I know the Skeleton of some old Bawd Nine Miles South West of S. Maximin lies in the midst of a thick wood the Cavern of la S. Baume where the Legendaries say that S. Mary Magdalen passed 33 years in a retir'd and penitent life after she was arriv'd thither from Palestina in a rotten Ship without any Pilot in company of Lazarus S. Martha and Cesidonius pretended to be that young Man Born blind whom our Saviour cur'd This Cavern is spacious being near 500 Foot high and the Rock wherein 't is digg'd is all of white Marble The place belongs to the Diocese of Marseille Brignole Brinonia so famous for its Pluims is likewise the head of a Bayliwick as also Barjols or Barjoux The other places of note are Esparonde de Pallieres Rians Tonques S. Paol Sambuc Peyroles Lambese Pelissane Alencon Aguiles Fuveaux Peinies Trets Porrteres Torrevez La Val Carces a County Cotignac and Foz Of the Diocese of Riez THis mountainous and small Country borders upon the Dioceses of Aix Apt Sisteron Senez and Frejus and is water'd by the Verdon It was the habitation of the ancient Albici Reii Segoregii or rather Segoreii who from the Worship of Apollo were sirnam'd Apollinares Their Capital Alebece Reiorum Apollinarium is ancienter than Aix which as it has been observ'd was a Roman Colony whereas this City seems to have been built by the Natives who before that time did often wage War with the Salians and Massilienses It is a little Town well built seated on the Source of the Auvestre almost 16 Leagues North East of Aix The Bishop is Lord Temporal of it and the second Suffragan of Aix The Cathedral is dedicated to our Lady The famous Semipelagian Faustus Rejensis was Bishop of it There have been found many ancient Inscriptions The most considerable places are La-Palu where is the famous Hermitage of S. Maurin Monstiers a Bayliwick Pymoisson Valencole Allemagne Montpezat Of the Diocese of SENEZ THis Country is also very mountainous and small and water'd by the Verdon It 's included betwixt the Dioceses of Riez Sisteron Digne Glanderez Vence Grace and Frejus This Diocese made part of the Province call'd Maritim Alps and was anciently inhabited by a People nam'd Vesdiantii by Ptolomy and Vendiantii Cemenelii by Pliny so that there was another Bishoprick Cemenelium which is perhaps Castellane The City of SENEZ Sanitium Vesdiantiorum Civitas Sanitiensium or Sanitio is very small and little inhabited its Bishop is Suffragan of Ambrun it is seated betwixt Mountains on the source of the Asse It s Prelate resides now at Castellane upon the Verdon The Chapter that was of the Order of S. Austin was made Secular by Innocent X. in 1647. it is composed of a Provost an Archdeacon a Sexton and 5 Canons of which one is Chamberlain The Cathedral is consecrated under the name of the Assumption of the B. Virgin The places of some note are Castellane a Bailywick Colmars Mevoiles Clumeng Lembrusche and Barremes Of the Diocese of DIGNE THis Diocese is one of the smallest and of the least revenue in France bringing hard●y 3 or 400 l. to its Prelate and having not ●bove 27 Baptismal Churches It lies betwixt ●hose of Senez Sisteron and Ambrun It is ve●y mountainous and water'd by two small Ri●ers the Issolet and the Bleone It was formerly in●abited by the Bodiontii and Sentii who had DIGNE Dinia or Dina for their
Capital that ●00 years ago was a considerable place being ●ivided into City and Burrough The City has ●till three Gates is surrounded with Walls and ●efended by square Towers and the ruin'd ●alls of the Burrough shew it to have been 600 ●●ces in Circuit Its first decay came from ●●at King Renatus Count of Provence transfer●ed to the City the Fairs that were in the Bur●●ugh An. 1437 and during the Civil Wars of ●●e last Age the Inhabitants retiring to the ●●y as to the strongest place left the Bur●●ugh almost Desart DIGNE is seated at the Foot of a Mountain ●●sh'd by the River Bleone which receives there ●e Mardaric a Rivulet of warm Water that ●akes this City famous for its Bathes It has a ●meschal Seat a Bailywick and a Bishoprick Suffragan of Ambrun Our Lady is the Cathedral Church whose Chapter which was once Regular of the Order of S. Austin is now composed of a Provost a Capiscol a Sexton and 9 Canons of which one is an Incumbent with 8 Prebenda●ies more and 2 Parsons The most considerable places are Mirabel Aiglun Corbons Brusquet-Toart-Collobrioux and Verdache As to Seyne which Robbe and hi● transcriber Dela Croix put in this Diocese it depends upon Embrun Of the Diocese of ARLES THis Diocese extends 18 Leagues East an● West from Salon on the B●rders of th● Diocese of Aix to Peccais in Languedoc and i● North and South from beyond Tarascon to th● Mediterranean Sea The City of ARLES Arel●s Arelatae Arel●te or Arelatum lies upon the Rhone with a Archbishoprick a Seneschal's Seat and an Ac●demy of Humane Learning associated to th● of Paris It was formerly the Chief of th● Kingdom of Burgundy and Arles The Roma● settled there their Sixth Colony and there a● still to be seen the remains of an Amphith●atre of an Obelisque a great many Mausole or stately Tombs of the Ancients witho● the City and many other considerable Monu●ents of Antiquity The Original of ARLES ●s uncertain because too ancient 't is sure that ●t is of Gaulish Foundation At first there were only Houses on the East ●●de of the Rhone but the Emperor Constantine the Great built a new Town on the West side ●nd joyn'd it to the old with a fine Bridge He ●leas'd himself extremely in this City Here ●● was that his youngest Son Constantine was Born that he call'd a Council against the Do●●tists that he established the Seat of the Cap●ain General or Governor of the Gauls and besides that he would it to bear his name and ●o be call'd Constantina for the future though ●is orders as to that have not been obey'd The Church of Arles is said to have been ●ounded by S. Trophime Disciple of S. Paul The Secular Power of this City has contributed ●uch to that of the Church It was at first Suffragan to Vienne but erected to a Metropo●is under the Empire of H●norius Then it had 〈◊〉 Suffragans viz. Marseille Orange S. Paul●uis-Chasteaux Toulon Avignon Vaison Carpen●tas Cavaillon But Avignon having been made ● Primate has carried away the 3 last with it ●elf To compensate this loss the Popes made ●e Archbishops of ARLES Vicars of the Ro●an See in the Gauls with power to declare ●aster to ordain Bishops and to celebrate Councils The Chapter of the Cathedral con●ists of 20 Canons among which there is a Pro●●st an Archdeacon a Sexton an Arch-priest 〈◊〉 Capiscol a Treasurer a Primicier and a Theologal there are also 20 Prebendaries or Incumbents It was made Secular in 1497 under Nicolas Cibo The Territory of this City ● 50 Leagues in Circuit consisting in two Islands called Great and Little Carmargue formed b● two Branches of the Rhone and in the Crau the latter is a large extent of Land covere● with Flint Stones on which Aeschylus says that Jupiter rain'd Stones to destroy the Lig●rians that were fighting against his Son Hercules This stony Champaign produces little Win● and Corn but there are vast quantities of Simples and Vermilion As to the Camargue whic● has its name from Caius Marius vanquisher ●● the Cimbers the Pastures that these Island bring forth are so good that the Cattel tha● feeds upon them grows extraordinary fierce an● strong Tarascon Tarasco Salyorum was the Capital ●● the Salyies before the building of Aix It lie● 3 Leagues North of ARLES and above 5 Sou● West of Avignon upon the River Rhone ov●● against Beaucaire next to a little Island whic● as it increases every day so it will at last ma●● the Proverb prove a lye That Betwixt Thain and Tournon Betwixt Beaucaire and Tarascon There feeds neither Cow nor Mutton This I observe to shew that new Islands m●● be form'd by the Rivers and Sea washing a● carrying away the ground and letting it su●side when they meet with a stop Tarascon h● an indifferent good Castle built by Renatus of Sicily and Count of Provence a Collegia● Church wherein they boast to have the Relicks of S. Martha and several Monasteries Besides ●his 't is the head of many Villages resorting to ●s Viguier There happen'd of late a pretty Story A Man digging in his Cellar met with ● Wall and an Iron-gate which he caused to ●e open'd and found it led into a vaulted way ●ut there he heard such a frightful noise that ●e durst not proceed farther The Magistrate was advis'd of it and with much ado got a Man condemn'd to dye to go through who at the end of that way met with another Iron-gate which was likewise shut and at which he ●nock'd in vain He related that the noise increas'd whilst he went along but that as he came nearer to the other Gate it seem'd as though he left that noise behind him This relation kindled the stronger the Magistrate's curiosity who still big with the hopes of undiscover'd Treasures got some Masons to go and open the Gate by promising them the 25th part of whatever should be found They perform'd it accordingly and found that this Gate led into Beaucaire Since what time the Masons of Tarascon use to say in a jearing way that the 25th part of Beaucaire belongs to them The other places of note are Salon a pretty good Town with a Principality depending ●pon the Archbishop of ARLES but more known for being the Birth and burying Place of that famous Astrologer Michael Nostradamus Les Baux a Marquisate belonging to the Prince of Monaco and formerly a Principality belonging to the Princes of Orange S. Martin in the Crau Notre-Dame de Dormet and les Trois Maries in the great Camargue S. Remi S. Gabriel Orgon Senas S. Chamas Berre that ha● good Salt-pits Vitrolles Istres Marignane Ferriere the Isle of Martegue Jonquieres c. Bu● I conclude because the remarkable things tha● are in the Diocese of ARLES would require a whole Volume Of the Diocese of Marseille THis Diocese that lies on the Sea-coast is very narrow having the Gulf and Island of Martegue on the West the Archbishoprick of Aix
on the North the Bishoprick of Toulo● on the East and the Sea on the South The City of MARSEILLE Massilia or Massalia is upon the Mediterranean Sea with a Bishoprick Suffragan of Arles an Admirality a Seneschal's Court a Bayliwick and other Jurisdictions its Port is sheltered from Winds and so good that it has never been heard a Ship has perished in it And therefore it 's the usual abode of the Gallies and where most Merchant-men of the Levant do resort which render it very Populous and Trading The Phoceans or Phocenses who came from Phocea a Colony of Athens in that part of Asia called Ionia were its Founders In Caesar's time this City was flourishing was a kind of Republick and had a famous University The Romans had a great esteem for it and made an Alliance with it It has undergone many revolutions and sustained many Wars it has had its Viscounts and divers other Sovereign Lords and was at last united to the Crown at the same time as the rest of Provence viz. in 1481. This City has been the Mother of many great Men and is now one of the biggest finest and best built of the Kingdom since it has been inlarged by the French King's order The Port the Arcenal the Cittadel the Gallies many other Buildings the South Walk or Race the New Streets the Markets the neat and stately Houses Churches Monasteries Seminaries Hospitals the College of the Fathers of the Oratory the Fountains c. are worth the curiosity of Strangers I would have spoken here of the Original of MARSEILLE of its Foundation by the Phoceans and Cenomani of its Government Laws Academy of Humane Learning of its Manufactories Trade Wars Conquests Colonies of its Alliance with the Romans of the Changes and Revolutions it has undergone under the Goths Sarracens the French Kings the Counts of Provence and its own Viscounts The other places of note in this Diocese are Aubagnes Roquevayre Oriols Cassis La Cioutat famous for its Muscadi●e Wines and for the Fabrick of Polacres a kind of Vessels us'd on the Medite●ranean Sea Olliols La Cadiere le Castelet c. Of the Diocese of TOULON THE Diocese of TOVLON lies also upon the Sea-coasts to the East of that o● Marseille to the South of that of Aix and to the West of that of Frejus The City of TOVLON Telo Martius lies upon the Mediterranean Sea almost 15 Leagues Eas● of Marseille with a very fine Port and Road a great Arcenal a Bailywick and a Bishoprick Suffragan of Arles It is very ancient Hen. IV fortified it with good strong Walls and buil● there two great Moles of 700 Paces each which do almost cover all the Port. This present King has finish'd this Work begun by his Grandfather whose description would require a grea● Volume there are fine Houses a great many Churches and Monasteries the Cathedral has many Relicks its first Bishop is esteem'd to be S. Honoratus and Hyeres is a little Town four Leagues East of TOVLON on the Sea over against the Isles Hyeres It has a Viguery and many Burroughs and Villages depending on it The other places are Sifours Cenari Solyes La Valette Turris Cuers Le Puget Pierrefuec Bormes c. Of the Diocese of FREJUS THis Diocese lies also upon the Sea-Coast betwixt those of Toulon Aix Riez Senez and Grace reaching 15 Leagues East and West and 17 North and South This Country was anciently inhabited by the Suelteri or Selteri The Capital Frejus Forum Julii or Civitas Foro-Juliensis is a Colony of the Romans and had formerly so good a Haven that the Emperor August kept there his Fleet for the defence and security of the Gauls This City lies now in a Fen half a League from the Sea on the River Argens with an indifferent Port and a Bishoprick the 4th Suffragan of Aix there are some remains of Antiquity to be seen for this City is very ancient and was very considerable heretofore as may be seen in many famous Authors The other places of note are S. Tropès a good Sea-port Town seated on Golfe de Grimaut Sinis or Plagia Samblacitana Draguignan another good Town upon the River Pis 6 Leagues and a half North West of FREJVS the Seat of the Viguier of this Diocese Callian Fayence Seillans Bargemes Comps Bargamon Caillas Eigueniere Taurene Flayose Lorgues Trans Les-Arqs Le-Muy Le-Luc Cogolin Grimaut Roquebrune La-Napole Of the Diocese of GRACE THE Diocese of GRACE lies on the East of that of Frejus on the West of that of Vence and the South of that of Senez It was anciently inhabited by the Deciates one of the Ligurian Nations that liv'd on this side of the Alps. The City of GRACE Grassa lies on a small River two Country Leagues North of the Sea with a Bishoprick Suffragan of Ambrun a Viguery or a Court of Justice The Episcopal See was transferr'd thither from Antibes by Pope Innocent IV. in 1250. by reason of the bad Air and the Incursions of Pyrates it is a pretty Town fortify'd with a good Cittadel c. The most considerable places are Antibe Antipolis a good Sea-port Town and a Colony of the Marseillois Canes upon Cape de la Croix Mogins Cesari Cipieres Le Bar Chateau-neuf Of the Diocese of VENCE THis Maritim Country the ancient habitation of the Nerusii has the Diocese of Grace to the West that of Glandeve to the North and the County of Nice to the East The Dioceses of Grace and VENCE are very small and afford but little Revenue The City of VENCE Vintium lies five Leagues North East from Grace and two North of the Sea It has a Bayliwick and a Bishoprick Suffragan of Ambrun It is very ancient the temporal Dominion is divided between the Bishop and the Baron of VENCE The Cathedral is dedicated to our Blessed Lady The famous Poet Godeau who has made a Paraphrastical Translation in French Rythms of the Psalms and the Canticle of Solomon written a Church History c. was Bishop of Grace and VENCE for these two Dioceses are oft joyn'd because of their nearness and smalness There are but four places of note in the Diocese of VENCE viz. Cagne and S. Laurens near the Sea S. Paol on the South side of VENCE and Le Broc near the Var. Of the Diocese of GLANDEVE BEfore the Romans and French this Country was inhabited by a Ligurian Nation call'd Velauni It lies now about the Var and Vaine having the Bishopricks of Grace and Vence to the South the County of Beuil to the East part of Embrunois to the No●th and the Dioceses of Digne and Senez to the West The City of GLANDEVE or Glannateva on the South side of the Var with a Bishoprick Suffragan of Ambrun is now almost ruin'd for the Bishop makes his residence at a Burrough called Entrevaux which has been built on the other side of the River with the Ruins of the City c. The other places of note are Guilleumes the Seat of
and on Languedoc to the West It is about 13 or 14 Leagues from South to North and from West to East it is the first of the Pope's Legateships a fruitful and pleasant Country there are an Archbishoprick 3 Bishopricks 4 Baronies and 78 Towns Burroughs or Villages In the Romans time it was inhabited by the Cavares and Memini since it pass'd under the French and from them to the Marquesses and the Counts of Provence In 1228 the Estates of Raimond Count of Toulouse having been seiz'd from him because of his protecting the Albigeois it was agreed amongst the Usurpers that the Lands which Raimond had possest on the East of the Rhone should be settled in trust only for a time to Gregory IX as appears by the Letters of this Pope to the French K. Lewis IX and Queen Blanche his Mother in 1230 and 1233. It s modern name Venaissin comes from Venatione because of the vast quantity of Game that is in this Country Avignon and its Territory made up a separate Dominion which still belong'd to the Counts of Provence but in 1348 Jane Queen of Naples and Sicily Countess of Provence sold this City with its Suburbs and Territory for the Summ of 80000 Golden Florens that is 48000 French Livres to Pope Clement VI. and lest it should be said that this summ came not near the value of so considerable a City it was inserted in the Agreement that the Queen made a free gift of the over-plus to the Pope Hereupon the French Historians observe 1. That this Princess being born in 1328. was not yet out of Age no more than her second Husband Lewis of Tarante 2dly That the sale was made without the consent of the Guardians given her by K. Robert her Grandfather when he instituted her his Universal Heir against his express will 3. That some years after the same Pope to hinder Queen Jane of selling others of her Countries gave out a Bull declaring void all the alienations made or to be made by the said Queen both in the Kingdom of Naples and in the County of Provence against the will of the said K. Robert her Grandfather 4thly That in 1365 Queen Jane declar'd void the sale of Avignon and all the others she had made to that very time These are the Chief reasons on which the French Kings ground their pretensions over Avignon and County Venaissin and for which they never fail of seizing upon this City and County as soon as they are at variance with the Court of Rome as did Lewis XIV in 1663. and 1688. I leave the Reader to judge of them as he may do very impartially since they are both our Enemies only with this difference that the one viz. the Pope is irreconcilable to us as long as we are Protestants whereas within some years we may be at peace with the other The City of AVIGNON Avenio Cavarum is upon the Rhone 8 Leagues North of Arles almost as many South East of Vzès and 10 North East of Nismes with an University and an Archbishoprick only since the year 1475. under Sixtus V. It was before that time a Bishoprick Suffragan of Arles Pope Clement IV. removed the Pontifical See to Avignon in 1305. Clement VI. bought that City 37 years after his Successors lived there quietly till the year 1380. as also during the Schism that is to the Council of Pise in 1409. It has a Court of Inquisition a Mint where Money is coyned with the Pope's Arms its Walls are fine its Churches magnificent its Avenues pleasant The justice is administred by the Consuls and their Assessor who is the Judge of the City the Viguier who is like the Provost of Merchants in Paris or the Lord Mayor in London judges without farther appeal all Causes and Suits not exceeding four gold Duckets but in other Causes one may appeal to the Vice-Legate who commits the matter to the Rote which consists of five Auditors and from thence one may still appeal to Rome All the Canons of the Cathedral Church of our Blessed Lady are clothed in Red and the Chaplains in Purple seven Popes have seated there during 70 years from 1307. till 1377. viz. Clement V. John XXII Benedict XII Clement VI. Innocent VI. Vrban V. and Gregory XI who by the persuasion of St. Catherine of Sienne remov'd to Rome again together with three Antipopes Clement VII Boniface IX and Benedict XIII from 1378 till 1409. This is called by the Italians The Babylonian Captivity of the Church And well may they compare their Church to Babylon for 't is as like to the Mystical Babylon of the Revelation as two drops of Water are to each other Amongst other resemblances the following will not be unpleasant viz. that the number of Seven the number of the Heads of the Beast seems to be affected in the publick buildings of Avignon which is the Master-piece of the Popes for there are 7 Parishes 7 Monasteries 7 Hospitals 7 Colleges 7 Palaces 7 Markets and 7 Gates which make up 7 times 7. The City of Carpentras Carpentoracte Meminorum lies upon the Russe 5 or 6 Leagues from Antignon with a Judge in Ordinary an Office of the Pope's Exchequer and a Bishoprick Susfragan of Avignon It is seated on the foot of Mount Ventoux which is four Leagues high and on the ruins of Venasque or Vindausca in a fruitful Soil with good Walls about it This is properly the Chief City of the County Venaissin Cavaillon Cabellio Colonia lies upon the Durance in an Island form'd by that River the Calevon and the Durancole 9 Miles South West of Avignon It was formerly seated on a Hill where are still some remains of old Buildings but now it lies in a very fruitful Plain though for the rest it is small and ill built the Cathedral is dedicated under the name of S. Veran one of its Bishops in the 6th Century It belong'd to the Cavares Vaison Vasio is seated upon a Hill washed by the Louveze It 's mention'd by Pliny Ptolomy and other ancient Geographers as one of the Cities of the Vocontii and seems to have been pretty considerable But it has been so oft ransack'd and plunder'd by the Goths Vandales and Sarracens that there is but a heap of ruins where it formerly laid viz. in the plain about the Church of our Lady The other places of note are M●rnas Chateau-neuf-du-Pape Barbentanes and Boulbon upon or near the Rhone Graveson Chateau-renard Noves Caumont and Valorges about the Durance Chateau-neuf L' Isle Pernes Pont de Sorgues near the River Sorgues Bedarides Sarrian Caron Flassan Mazan Venasque S. Didier about Carpentras Miolans Queyrane and Cameret about Vaison Of the Principality of Orange I Put here this Principality because it cannot be describ'd any where else since it 's included by the County Venaissin on all sides save on the West by the Rhone It is very small though its Territory be extraordinary fertil in Wine Corn Fruits c. for its greatest length