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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: APO-ARN |
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ARDECHE , an inland department of south-eastern France, formed in 1790 from the Vivarais, a district
Languedoc
chief
chief
elevation
walnut
supply of skins for glove-making. Mines of coal, iron, lead and zinc are worked, and the quarries furnish hydraulic lime (Le Teil) and other products. Besides flour-mills, distilleries and saw-mills, there are important silk-mills and leather-works and paper -factories. Annonay is the principal industrial town. The department exports wine, cattle, lime, mineral
paper , &c. Hot springs are numerous, and some of them, as those of Vals, St Laurent-les-Bains, Celles and Neyrac, are largely resorted to. Ardeche is served by the Paris-Lyon-Mediterranee railway and has some 43 m.II 450 of navigable waterway. The department is divided into the arrondissements of Privas, Largentiere and Tournon, with 31 cantons and 342 communes. It forms the diocese of Viviers and part of the archiepiscopal province of Avignon. It is in the region of the XV. army corps, and within the circumscription of the academic (educational division) of Grenoble. Its court of appeal is at Nimes. Privas, the capital , Annonay, Aubenas, Largentiere and Tournon are the principal towns. Bourg-St Andeol, Thines, Melas and Cruas have interesting Romanesque churches. Mazan has remains of a Cistercian abbey founded in the 12th century to which its vast church belongs. Viviers is an old town with a church of various styles of architecture and several old houses.End of Article: ARDECHE If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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