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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FLA-FRA |
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FOIX , a town of south-western France, in the middle ages capital of the counts of Foix, and now capital of the department of Ariege, 51 M. S. of Toulouse, on the Southern railway from that city to Ax. Pop. (1906) town, 4498; commune, 675o. It is situated between the Ariege and the Arget at their confluence. The old part of the town, with its ill-paved winding streets and old houses, is dominated on the west by an isolated rock crowned by the three towers of the castle (12th, 14th and 15th centuries), while to the south it is limited by the shady Promenade de Villotte. The chief
The county of Foix included roughly the eastern part of the modern department of Ariege, a region watered chiefly by the Ariege and its affluents. During the later middle ages it consisted of an agglomeration of small holdings ruled by lords, who, though subordinate to the counts of Foix, had some voice in the governmentof the district. Protestantism obtained an early entrance into the county, and the religious struggles of the 16th and 17th centuries were carried on with much implacability therein. The estates of the county, which can be traced back to the 14th century, consisted of three orders and possessed considerable power and virility. In the 17th and 18th centuries Foix formed one of the thirty-three governments of France, and in 1790 it was incorporated in the department of Ariege. Counts of Foix.The counts of Foix were an old and distinguished French family which flourished from the 11th to the 15th century. They were at first feudatories of the counts of Toulouse, but chafing under this yoke they soon succeeded in throwing it off, and during the 13th and 14th centuries were among the most powerful of the French feudal nobles. Living on the borders of France, having constant intercourse with Navarre, and in frequent communication with England, they were in a position peculiarly favourable to an assertion of independence, and acted rather as the equals than as the dependents of the kings of France. The title of count of Foix was first assumed by Roger, son of Bernard
Bernard
Augustus
feud
house
Languedoc
ransom ; and this war lasted until 1377, when peace was made. Early in 138o the count was appointed governor of Languedoc
divorced in 1373, he had an only son, Gaston, who is said to have been incited by his uncle, Charles II., king of Navarre, to poison his father, and who met his death in 1381. It is probable, as Froissart says, that he was killed by his father. Left without legitimate sons, Gaston was easily persuaded to bequeath his lands to King Charles VI., who thus obtained Foix and Hearn when the count died at Orthes in 1391. Gaston was very fond of hunting, but was not without a taste for art and literature. Several beautiful manuscripts are in existence which were executed by his orders, and he himself wrote De-dulls de la chasse des bestes sauvaiges et des oiseaulx de pro ye. Froissart, who gives a graphic description of his court and his manner of life, speaks enthusiastically of Gaston, saying: " I never saw none like him of personage, nor of so fair form, nor so well made," and again, ` in everything he was so perfect that he cannot be praised too much." Almost immediately after Gaston's death King Charles VI. granted the county of Foix to Matthew, viscount of Castelbon, a descendant of Count Gaston I. Dying without issue in 1398, Matthew's lands were seized by Archambault, count of Grailly and captal de Buch , the husband of his sister Isabella (d.1426), who became count of Foix in 1401. Archambault's eldest son, John (c. 13821436); who succeeded to his father's lands and titles in 1412, had married in 1402 Jeanne, daughter of Charles III., king of Navarre. Having served the king of France in Guienne and the king of Aragon in Sardinia, john became the royal representative in Languedoc, when the old quarrel between Foix and Armagnac broke out again. During the struggle between the Burgundians and the Armagnacs, he intrigued with both parties, and consequently was distrusted by the dauphin, afterwards King Charles VII. Deserting the cause of France, he then allied himself with Henry V. of England; but when Charles VII. became king in 1422, he returned to his former allegiance and became the king's representative in Languedoc and Guienne. He then assisted to suppress the marauding bands which were devastating France; fought for Aragon against Castile; and aided his brother, the cardinal of Foix, to crush some insurgents in Aragon. Peter, cardinal of Foix (13861464), was the fifth son of Archambault of Grailly, and was made archbishop of Arles in 1450. He took a prominent part in the struggle between the rival popes, and founded and endowed the College de Foix at Toulouse. The next count was John's son, Gaston IV., who married Leonora (d. 1479), a daughter of John, king of Aragon and Navarre. In 1447 he bought the viscounty of Narbonne, and having assisted King Charles VII. in Guienne, he was made a peer of France in 1458. In 1455 his father-in-law designated him as his successor in Navarre, and Louis XI. of France gave him the counties of Rousillon and Cerdagne, and made him his representative in Languedoc and Guienne; but these marks of favour did not prevent him from joining a league against Louis in 1471. His eldest son, Gaston, the husband of Madeleine, a daughter of Charles VII. of , France, died in 1470, and when Gaston IV. died two years later, his lands descended to his grandson, Francis Phoebus (d. 1483), who became king of Navarre in 1479, and was succeeded by his sister Catherine (d. 1517), the wife of Jean d'Albret (d. 1516). Thus the house
Nemours he took command of the French troops in Italy. Having delivered Bologna and taken Brescia, Gaston encountered the troops of the Holy League at Ravenna in April 1512, and after putting the enemy to flight was killed during the pursuit. From the younger branch of the house of Foix-Grailly have also sprung the viscounts of Lautrec and of Meilles, the counts of Benanges and Candale, and of Gurson and Fleix. See D. J. Vaissete, Histoire generate de Languedoc, tome iv. (Paris, 1876) ; L. Flourac, Jean Ie , comte de Foix, vicomte souverain de Beam (Paris, 1884); Le Pere Anselme, Histoire genealogique, tome iii. (Paris, 17261733) ; Castillon, Histoire du comte de Foix (Toulouse, 1852) ; Madaune, Gaston Pho'bus, comae de Foix et souverain de Beam (Pau, 1865) ; and Froissart's Chroniques, edited by S. Luce and G. Raynaud (Paris, 1869-1897). End of Article: FOIX If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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