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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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Town where the Provost of Merchants and Sheriffs are allowed Noblemen and Knighted after two years Employment As for the Justice of Paris there is the Provost a Man of the short Gown three Lieutenants viz. the Civil Criminal and Particular and several Counsellors who compose the Presidial and keep Court in ●he Great Chastelet The Judge and Consuls of Merchants drawn out of that Body ●o the number of five being sworn before the Parliament sit in St. Mederic's Cloister As to the Parliament of Paris called also ●he Court of Peers because the Dukes and Peers of France and the Officers of the Crown take their Oaths there and cannot be judged elsewhere especially for any Crime at least according to Law for Cardinal Richelieu passed by this formally when he gave Commission to try the Marshall of Marillac and afterwards the Duke of Montmorency purposely perhaps to derogate the Parliaments Authority and make the Monarchy more absolute However Paris has yet the first and noblest Parliament in the Kingdom having been founded by Pepin Head of the Second Stock of the French Kings in 755 or 756 and made sedentary by Philip the Fair in 1302. The whole Governments of the Isle of France Picardy Champaign Orleannois and Lionnois and the Diocess of Macon depend upon it and this Court only knows of the King's Regalia Peerdoms and Portions given to the Royal Children It 's composed of eighteen Presidents and an hundred sixty nine Counsellors a● divided into eight Chambers The gr●● Chamber has seven Presidents besides 〈◊〉 first and twenty nine Counsellors Du●● and Peers and Counsellors of Honour m●● sit and vote there as well as the Arc●bishop of Paris since his Church was ere●●ed into a Dutchy and Peerdom in 167● and the Abbot of St. Denis in quality 〈◊〉 Counsellor of Honour The King's M●sters of Requests have the same Priviledg● but four only of them may sit there at o● time The five following Chambers a● called Chambres des Enquêtes or Inquiri●● and have each two Presidents and twent● eight Counsellors The two last Chambe● bear the Name of Tournelle because the● have no proper Magistrates but are fille● up by turns with those of the other Chambers Thus the Criminal Tournelle has fou● Presidents and eighteen Counsellors of th● Great Chamber and ten of the Inquiries and the Civil Tournelle has four Presidents and six Counsellors of the Great Chamber and twenty of the others In 1587 King Henry IV. had established a Chamber of th● Edict in that Parliament on behalf of hi● Protestant Subjects and bestowed the Dignity of Counsellor on six of their Men but this commendable and impartial Institution was suppressed by the present King in 1669 During the great Vacations beginning on the 7th of September and ending at the ●2th of November there is a Chamber e●tablished to make an end of Suits that can●ot be deferred Besides these there are several other Courts as the Court of Accounts fixed at ●aris at the same time as the Parliament The Court of Aides erected by Charles VI. ●nd increased with two other Chambers by Henry II. and Lewis XIII The Court of ●he Mint The Chamber of the Treasure where the General Treasurers of France ●eep their Court That of the Marshals of ●rance of the Admiral of the Great Ma●ters of Waters and Woods is kept at the Marble-Table The Baily of the Palace ●as his Chamber in the Great Hall and ●he Great Council have theirs without the ●alace in the Cloister of St. Germain ●'Auxerrois c. The Bishoprick of Paris was erected into an Archbishoprick in 1622. ●nd has for Suffragans Meaux Chartres ●nd Orleans The Place Royal is one of the finest of ●he whole Town both for the Symmetry ●nd Magnificence of the Buildings and for ●he Piazza's and Arches that environ it with the cast Copper Statue of Lewis XIII ●n the middle on a Foot-stall of white Marble with Inscriptions Here stood formerly an Hôtle or Palace called des Tour●elles but because Henry II. died there of the Wound he received in his Eye at Turnament Catharine of Medicis got th● stately Building pulled down Carrous● were kept in this Market in 1612 up●● the Subject of the King 's and his Siste● Marriage with the Infanta and Prince 〈◊〉 Spain The Louvre that was the ordinary Re●●dence of the Kings of France from Le●●● XII till Lewis XIV was built by Phil●● August in 1214 to keep his Papers an● Noble Men Prisoners It has been increa●ed and beautified since Francis I. by most 〈◊〉 his Successors At present it comprehen● the Louvre properly so called and the P●lace of the Tuilleries joyned together by o●● of the finest Galleries in Europe the Building and Ornaments are considerable th● Depth of the Foundations being taken fro● the Heighth and Thickness of the Work with Conveniency of Apartments and Offices It s Form is rather long than square and 't is said this present King ordered 〈◊〉 Piece of Tapistry to be made that should reach from one end to the other representing the chief Towns he has taken an● the Battels fought and gained by his Armies There is another Monument of this Princes Vanity and Pride but I don't know whether it 's finished viz. His Brazen Statue o● Horse-back upon a Rock looking as unaccessible as though nothing had been able to withstand him His Enemies are represent●d under his Feet and amongst the rest ●he pretended Hereticks Rebels and Duel●ists At the foot of the Rock are the four ●rincipal Rivers which he is gone over as ●he Rhine the Scheld the Meuse and the Moselle The Royal Printing-House is in the Gal●ery of the Louvre and the French Academy have Lodgings in this Palace There is ●lso a Place prepared for the King's Library and Closet of Rarities The Palace of Orleance is a magnificent and regular Building enriched with seve●al fine Statues and adorned with excellent Paintings which with its fine Gardens Fountains Grotto's and Water-works makes ●it a very pleasant Place The others are that which Mary of Medicis built in the Suburb of St. Germain and still has the Name of Luxemburg those of Bourbon Navarre Soissons Angoulême Longueville Espernon Maine Montmorency Bouillon but especially that of the Cardinal of Richelieu whereof the Riches and Ornaments are surprising Those of Vendôme Guise Chevreuse Nevers Sulli and Schomberg are sit to lodge any Prince in As for publick Places these that follow are the chief the Place Royal which has been already mentioned St. John's Church-Yard the Grêve the Vally of Misery the Place Dauphine the Parvis of Nôtre Dame the New Market and Place Maube●● A Market called La Place des Victoires ●●tuated in that part of the Town whi●● bears the Name of Richelieu is become f●mous since the mad and blasphemous Flatt●ry of the Duke of La Feuillade In 168● this Lord erected to the present King 〈◊〉 brazen Statue washed over with Gold upon a Marble Foot-stall underpropt by fou● Slaves and
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-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
seen there Unless it were the Limonum whereof I just now spake For Poictiers it self has several other Monuments of Antiquity as an old demolish'd Castle thought to be the Palace of the Emperour Gullienas some remains of an Amphitheatre call'd les Arenes behind the Church of the Jesuits and without the Town the Ruins of divers Aquaeducts which the common People names les Arceaux de Parigne the Arches of Parigne I have mentioned the several Changes through which Poictiers passed speaking of POICTOV and likewise the Battel of Civaux but I must not so get that famous Victory obtained by our Black Prince that Martial Son of a Warlike Father Edward the III. over the French King John September 19. 1336. within two Leagues of Poictiers The King having an Army of above 30000 Men and the Prince hardly 12000 the latter profered to go back and to repay all the Damage he had done from Bourdeaux thitherto But the French meaning that a handful of Enemies ought to Surrender at discretion and could not avoid being cut into pieces would not hearken to any Proposals which so exasperated the English that they fought like Lions gave a total Overthrow to the French and took their King Prisoner The Church of Poictiers is said to have been founded by St. Martial a Kinsman to the first Christian Martyr St. Stephen and he from whom our Saviour took the five Loaves and the two Fishes which his Blessing so miraculously multiplied in the Wilderness St. Peter add the Roman Legendaries sent him into Aquitain where he converted a great many Heathens especially in POICTOV and even laid the Foundation of the Cathedral of St. Peter on that very Day that H. Apostle was Martyr'd What ever be of this for the Monks have so mixed with Fables the antient Accounts that it is a hard matter to distinguish Truth from Falshood This is more certain that about the Year 279 Nectarius or Victorius a learned Man mentioned by St. Jerome was Bishop of Poictiers He was succeeded by several other great Men amongst whom Hilarius that famous Defensor of the Orthodox Faith against the Arians was the tenth in Order under whose Name a Collegiate Church has been since built At the end of the 5th Century that See was fill'd with one of the best Poets of that Age. Venantius Fortunatus who had belong'd to the Houshold of Radegund Queen of France This Diocess has been bigger than it 's now and extended through the whole Province of POICTOV For Lusson and Maillezais have been separated from it and erected from Monasteries into Bishoppricks However it contains yet 22 Parishes 21 of which are included in the City besides 30 Abbies 25 Chapters of Canons and a vast number of Religious Houses the Parishes being under the Inspection of four Arch-Priests The Cathedral of St. Peter was begun by our King Henry the II. and finished 200 Years after It 's a sumptuous Building all of a hard Square-Stone In the Church of our Lady sirnam'd the Great the Mayor's Lady uses to offer every Year the day after Easter a Cloak of considerable value On the outside of the Wall that looks on the great Market is the Statue of the Emperour Constantine on Horse-back with a Sword in his Hand The Collegiate Church of St. Hilary immediately subject to the Pope lies on the upper end of the Town The French King is Abbot of it as Count of Poictiers There is shewn a Stone which consumes Dead Bodies within 24 Hours together with the Tomb of Godfrey the Great-Tooth pretended Son to the Famous Melusine of Luzignan and the hollow Stump of a Tree where Mad-men are put in in hopes that they shall recover their Senses whence comes a jearing Proverb amongst 'em to Send one to St. Hilary Cradle Poictiers is the biggest City in France next Paris as to the compass of its Walls though the not ●●ear so thick Inhabited as Rouen Tou●●se or Lyons there being a great many Gardens and even Meadows Vines and Corn-fields with●n its inclosure for which reason Charles V. ●he Emperour call'd it a great Village It 's built partly in a Plain on the West-side and partly ●n a Hill shut up betwixt the River Clain and another that stagnates there into small Rivulets Marshes and Ponds so that it could hardly be taken were it not that the lower Town is commanded by high Rocks nam'd by the Inhabitants Dubes instea of Dunes or Downs The greatest inconveniency of Poictiers is its lack of Water for there are no Fountains and very few Cisterns and therefore the Citizens are forc'd to b●y Water that is carried into the Town from a Fountain springing near the Clain at a place call'd Platteforme All the inferior Seats of Justice in the Province of Poictou resort to the Presidial and Se●eschaship of Poictiers and in 1415 whil'st the English were Masters of Paris and Charles the VII Dauphin of France was disputing the Crown against 'em Poictiers had the Honour to be the Seat of a Parliament which when the English were expell'd that Kingdom was restored to Paris The Palace where the Judges ●●eep their sitting was formerly a Castle that 〈◊〉 still a very fine Hall whose Wainscotted ●●iking is not underpropt by Pillars Next to this Palace is the antient Tower of ●●●bergeron built by an Earl of POICTOV therein the seven Viscounties of this Province ●●e represented Next to the Gate of St. Lazarus was another Castle built in a Triangular Form but ther● are no Remains of it besides the place when it stood and some strong Towers against the Walls La Pierre Levée The Stone rais'd up is one of the Curiosities of Poictiers which Stranger● do not fail to see it being but a Mile from the City It 's a large Square-stone 25 Foot in length 17 in Breadth and 60 in Circuit having these two Verses ingraven upon it Hic Lapis ingentem superat gravitate Colossum Ponderis grandi sidera mole petit The University of Poictiers was founded by Charles the VII in 1431 and has been formerly more famous than it 's now especially fo● the Civil Law The Auditory or the Ha● wherein the Law is read is very large and sumptuous and was built in the French K. Henry the IV's Time by the Duke of Sully whil's● he was Governour of POICTOV Poictiers has likewise a Mint where Mony i● Coyned at the Letter G. as also an Excheque● and a Generality to which nine Elections ar● resorting that is all those of POICTOV except Loudun and Mirebeau that depend o● the Generality of Tours As to the Government of the Town it is i● the Hands of a Mayor twelve Sheriffs or E●chevins twelve sworn Counsellors besides seventy five Burgesses The Mayor is not 〈◊〉 Lord but even the first Baron of POICTOV and takes the Title of Captain and Governo● Poictiers during his Charge which is but ●eatly for a new one is elected every Year 〈◊〉 St. Cyprian's Day but afterwards both he ●●d his
good Village not otherwise considerable than that it gives its name to a River and is one of the Passes of Dauphine into the Marquisate of Saluces and so farther into Piemont Of Brianconois THis Mountainous Country reaches 18 or 20 Leagues East and West from Pignerol to the Mountains call'd Produissen and 16 North and South from Chateau-Dauphin to Col de La Roue It was formerly of a narrower extent before Pignerol and the adjacent Vallies were yielded to the French King In this Territory falls a sweet and purging Dew called La Manne de BRIANCON and accounted one of the seven Wonders of this Province The Capital BRIANCON is now the head of that Bailiwick and the Seat of a Presidial but was never a Bishoprick tho Robbe calls it so Under the Dauphins it had the Title of a Principality of which they bore the name but under the Romans it was at first one of the places where they used to incamp but by little and little it became a Place of some note Both this Town and Country made part of the Kingdom of Cottius that famous Gaulish Prince whom Augustus not being able to subdue persented with the Alliance of the Roman Empire His whole Realm consisted in 12 Towns of which Suse was the Capital but he knew so well how to in●●ench himself that both his Subjects and his Enemies concurr'd to give his name to the Mountains whereon he reign'd calling them Cottian Alps during the extent of 14 Leagues ●rom Mount Viso to Mount Cenis This Town ●n Latin Brigantio or Brigantium depended for ● long time upon the Segusiones or the Princes ●f Suze BRIANCON is now built on the foot of ● Rock near Mount Genevre on the meeting ●f two small Brooks one of which bears the ●●me of Dure viz. the most Easterly and the ●●ther that of Ance but after their junction ●he common name of Durance BRIANCON is esteemed by reason of its Situation the ●ighest Town in Europe tho it be commanded ●y a Castle built upon the Rock at the bottom ●f which the Town lies Two Leagues South 〈◊〉 BRIANCON is a pierced Rock call'd ●●tuis Rostan some believe that Caesar caused ●●is Passage to be made thorough this Rock for ●is Troops at his entrance into the Gaules Others ●e of opinion that it is the same Rock which ●nnibal caused to be pierced with Fire and ●inegar that his Elephants might pass thorough ●thers again think that it is a Work of King ●●tius in honour of Augustus whose Statue he ●●ected upon it Whatsoever it may be BRI●NCON has not been considerable before 〈◊〉 13th Century In the last Age the Leaguers ●●zed upon it but the Duke of Lesdiguieres ●ok it from them in 1590. This Town has produced one of the learnedest Mathematicians of France called Oronce Finé who was professor Royal at Paris and died in 1555. Pignerol is properly a City of Piedm●nt and formerly was the Title and Portion of the Dukes of Savoy's youngest Sons It is seated upon the small River Cluson or Chisson which falls into the Po near Moncallier two Leagues South of Turin It had formerly a good Cittadel only but since the French have it in their possession they have fortified it so as to make it almost an impregnable place The Cittadel is built on a Rock and the Town between the last Mountains of the Alps seven Leagues South-East of Turin and 12 North West of BRIANCON There 's is a Fort call'd St. Bridge which has communication with the Cittadel by a cover'd way and subterraneous passages The Duke of Savoy at the head of the Confederate Forces took it this year 1693. But instead of going on vigorously with the Siege of the Town and Cittadel they left them block'd up and went to sight Catinat the French General who lay incamp'd with 12 or 14000 Men betwixt the Mountains of Col de Fenestrelles and Col de Rossa seven or eight Leagues North West of Pignerol But when they were gone so far they perceived they could not come at him So that after much time lost they went back and open'd the Trenches before Pignerol in September rais'd the Siege and were deseated October the 4th 1693. 'T is a pleasure to read the cunning fetches of that shrewd Politician Cardinal Rihelieu to get this Strong-hold into his Master's Hands There arose a Civil War in Piedmont perhaps by this subtle Minister's Devices The Uncles of the young Duke pretending to the Regency against the Dutchess Dowager who had been left in possession of it by her Husband As she was a Princess of the French Blood she presently implor'd the assistance of her Cousin especially seeing that her Competitors were assisted by the Spaniards It had been an easy matter for the French Monarch to maintain the Dutchess in the quiet possession of her Right But the Policy of his chief Minister suffered her to come to that extremity that she kept nothing else beyond the Alps besides Turin and its Cittadel Whilst she was in those Fears she was promised a sufficient Succor to restore her into all her Dominions provided she would yield to the French King Pignerol and all the Vallies of Piedmont She was very loath to part with such a large Portion of her Territories but at last for fear of loosing all she consented to yield Pignerol with the Vallies on the East-side of the River Cluson whereupon the Treaty was secretly concluded in the Town of Queyras the 31th of March 1631 so that ever since the important Vallies of Perouse and Pragelas belong'd to the French King There are some other places that give their Name to Vallies as the Burough of Bardonanche the Town of Queyras with a strong Castle and a Mountain washed by the River Guillestre the Burough of Chasteau-Dauphin which seems to have been built by the Princes of that Country against the Incursions of the Piemontois for it lies on the utmost Borders of Dauphine ten Leagues South East of BRIANCON The Fort of Exilles is another considerable passage from France into Italy 13 Miles North-West of Brianon and but 3 East of Suze Caesar makes mention of it in the first Book of his Commentaries under the name of Ocelum The Country about it is called by the Inhabitants the Valley of Duren CHAP. XVIII Of Low DAUPHINE Of VIENNOIS THis Country that now comprehends the Bayliwicks of Vienne and St. Marcellin was formerly called the Isle of the Allobroges it being included between the Rivers Rhosne on the North and West the Isere on the South and the Giare on the East and reaching 24 Leagues North and South and 18 East and West it is the best and most inhabited part of Dauphiné being water'd with several Rivers and less interrupted with Mountains than the others The Capital Vienne built upon the Rhone where it receives the small River Gere lies 8 Leagues South of Lyons 18 Norli of Valence and as many North-West of Gren●ble It is accounted one