Bar-le-Duc

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Coordinates: 48°46′19″N 5°09′37″E / 48.771944, 05.160278

Commune of Bar-le-Duc

Bar-le-Duc Clock-tower

Location
Bar-le-Duc (France)
Bar-le-Duc
Administration
Country France
Region Lorraine
Department Meuse (préfecture)
Arrondissement Bar-le-Duc
Canton Chief town of 2 cantons
Intercommunality Communauté
de communes
de Bar-le-Duc
Mayor Martine Huraut
(2001-2008)
Statistics
Elevation 175 m–327 m
(avg. 240 m)
Land area¹ 23.62 km²
Population²
(1999)
16,944
 - Density 717/km² (1999)
Miscellaneous
INSEE/Postal code 55029/ 55000
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
2 Population sans doubles comptes: residents of multiple communes (e.g. students and military personnel) only counted once.
France

Bar-le-Duc is a town in northeastern France, in the Meuse département, of which it is the préfecture (capital).

Contents

[edit] History

Bar-le-Duc was at one time the seat of the countship, later duchy, of Bar. Though probably of ancient origin, the town was unimportant till the 10th century when it became the residence of the counts.

Originally part of the early medieval duchy of Upper Lorraine. At some stage in the early modern period it was acquired by the neighbouring dukes of Lorraine.

Population (1906): 14,624.

See also: Counts and dukes of Bar

[edit] Geography

The lower, more modern and busier part of the town extends along a narrow valley, shut in by wooded or vine-clad hills, and is traversed throughout its length by the Ornain, which is crossed by several bridges. It is limited towards the north-east by the Marne-Rhine Canal, on the south-west by a small arm of the Ornain, called the Canal des Usines, on the left bank of which the upper town (Ville Haute) is situated.

[edit] Sights

The Ville Haute, which is reached by staircases and steep narrow thoroughfares, is intersected by a long, quiet street, bordered by houses of the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries. In this quarter are the remains (16th century) of the chateau of the dukes of Bar, dismantled in 1670, the old clock-tower, and the college, built in the latter half of the 16th century. Its church of St Stephen (14th and 15th centuries) contains a skilfully-carved effigy in white stone of a half-decayed corpse, the work of Ligier Richier (1500-1572), a pupil of Michelangelo erected to the memory of René of Châlon (d. 1544).

The lower town contains the official buildings and two or three churches, but these are of little interest. Among the statues of distinguished natives of the town is one to Charles Nicolas Oudinot, whose house serves as the hotel-de-ville.

[edit] Economy

Corset from Bar-le-Duc, 1878
Corset from Bar-le-Duc, 1878

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition (1911):

Bar-le-Duc has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, a board of trade arbitrators, a lycee, a training-college for girls, a chamber of commerce, a branch of the Banque de France and an art museum. The industries of the town include ironfounding and the manufacture of machinery, corsets, hosiery, flannel goods, jam and wall-paper, and brewing, cotton spinning and weaving, leather-dressing and dyeing. Wine, timber and iron are important articles of commerce.

[edit] Miscellaneous

Bar-le-Duc was the birthplace of:

A great silk factory was established here by Jean-François Jacqueminot.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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