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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: DIO-DRO |
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DROME , a department ip the south-east of France, formed of parts of Dauphine and Provence, and bounded W. by the Rhone, which separates it from Ardeche, N. and N.E. by Isere, E. by Hautes-Alpes, S.E. by Basses-Alpes, and S. by Vaucluse; area 2533 sq. m.; pop. (1t)o6) 297,270. Drome is traversed from east to west by numerous rivers of the Rhone basin, chief
The agriculture of the department is moderately prosperous. The main crops are wheat, which is grown chiefly on the banks of the Isere and Rhone, oats and potatoes. Large flocks of sheep feed on the pastures in the south; cattle-raising is carried on principally in the north-east. Good wines, among which the famous Hermitage growth ranks first, are grown on the hills and plains near the Rhone and Drome. Fruit culture is much practised. Olives and figs are grown in the south; the cultivation of mulberries and walnuts is more widely spread. In the rearing of silkworms Drome ranks high in importance among French departments. The Montelimar district is noted for its truffles, which are also found elsewhere in the department. The mineral
kaolin
porcelain
wood
chief
cotton
paper employs much labour. Drome exports fruit, oil, cheese, wine, wool, live stock and its manufactured articles; the chief import is coal. It is served by the Paris-Lyon railway, and the Rhone and Isere furnish over loo m. of navigable waterway. The canal de la Bourne, the only one in the department, is used for purposes of irrigation only. Drome is divided into the arrondissementsDRONE 589 of Valence, Die, Monteliinar and Nyons, comprising 29 cantons and 379 communes: The capital is Valence, which is the seat of a bishopric of the province of Avignon. The department forms part of the academic (educational division) of Grenoble, where its court of appeal is also located, and of the region of the XIV. army corps.Besides Valence, the chief towns of the department are Die, Montelimar, Crest and Romans(qq.v.). Nyons is a small industrial town with a medieval bridge and remains of ramparts. Suze-la-Rousse is dominated by a fine chateau with fortifications of the 12th and 14th centuries; in the interior the buildings are in the Renaissance style. At St Donat there are remains of the palace of the kings of Cisjuran Burgundy; though but little of the building is of an earlier date than the 12th century, it is the oldest example of civil architecture in France. The churches of Leoncel, St Restitut and La Garde-Adhemar, all of Romanesque architecture, are also of antiquarian interest
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