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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GAG-GEO |
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GASCONY (Wasconia) , an old province in the S.W. of France. It takes its name from the Vascones, a Spanish tribe which in 58o and 587 crossed the Pyrenees and invaded the district
submission in 816, and the Carolingians were able to establish Frankish dukes in the country. Three of these are known: Seguin (Sighivinus) ,William (Guillaume) ,and Arnaud (Arnaldus). They were at the same time counts of Bordeaux, and succumbed to the Normans. After the death of Arnaud in 864 the history of Gascony falls into the profoundest obscurity. The lists of the loth-century dukes prepared by ancient and modern historians can only be established by means of hypotheses based in many cases on spurious documents (e.g. the charter of Alaon), and little confidence can be placed in them. During this troubled period Gascony was from time to time attached to one or other of the other Vascon states which had been formed on the southern slope of the Pyrenees, but in the reign of Hugh Capet it was considered as forming part of France, from which it has never been separated. Disputed in the nth century by the counts of Poitiers, who were also dukes of Aquitaine, and by the counts of Armagnac, the duchy finally passed to the house
great
From about 1073 to 1137 Gascony was governed by the dukes of Aquitaine and counts of Poitiers, one of whom, William IX., gave the first charter of privileges to the town of Bayonne; but the duchy was weakened by the increasing independence of its great
marriage
house
work
During the Hundred Years' War Gascony was obviously a battle-field for the forces of England and of France. The French seized the duchy, but, aided by the rivalry between the powerful houses of Foix and Armagnac, Edward III. was able to recover it, and by the treaty of Bretigny in 136o John II. recognized the absolute sovereignty of England therein. Handed over as a principality by Edward to his son, the Black Prince, it was used by its new ruler as a base during his expedition into Spain, in which he received substantial help from the Gascon nobles. The renewal of the war between England and France, which took place in 1369, was due in part to a dispute over the sovereignty of Gascony, and during its course the position of the English was seriously weakened, the whole of the duchy save a few towns and fortresses being lost; but the victories of Henry V. in northern France postponed for a time the total expulsion of the foreigner. This was reserved for the final stage of the war and was one result of the efforts of Joan of Arc, the year 1451 witnessing the capture of Bayonne and the final retreat of the English troops from the duchy. During this time the inhabitants of Gascony suffered severely from the ravages of both parties, and the nobles ruled or misruled without restraint.The French kings, especially Louis XI., managed to restore the royal authority in the duchy, although this was not really accomplished until the close of the 15th century when the house of Armagnac was overthrown. It was by means of administrative measures
Languedoc
east
At the end of the ancien regime Gascony was united with Guienne to form a great military government. After the division of France into departments, Gascony, together with Beam, French Navarre and the Basque country, formed the departments of Basses-Pyrenees, Landes, Hautes-Pyrenees and Gers. Parts of Gascony also now form arrondissements and cantons of the departments of Lot-et-Garonne, Haute-Garonne, Ariege and Tarn-et-Garonne. See Arnaud Ofhenart, Notitia utriusque Vasconiae, tam Ibericae ram Aquitanicae (1637) ; L'Abbe Monlezun, Histoire de la Gascogne 846-185o), comprising a number of useful but uncritically edited documents; and Jean de Jaurgain, La Vasconie, etude historique et critique sur les origines . . . du duche de Gascogne . . . et des grands fiefs du duche de Gascogne (1898-1902), a learned and ingenious work
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