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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SIV-SOU |
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SOMME , a department of northern France, formed in 1790 of a large part of the province of Picardy (comprising Vermandois, Santerre, Amienois, Ponthieu, Vimeu, and Marquenterre) and a small portion of Artois. Pop. (1906), 532,567. Area 2423 sq. m. It is bounded on the N. by Pas-de-Calais, E. by Aisne, S. by Oise, and S.W. by Seine-Inferieure, and its sea-coast extends 28 M. along the English Channel. Two streams flowing into the Channelthe Authie on the north and the Bresle on the southwestbound it in these directions. The surface consists of great
Aumale . From the mouth of the Authie to the Bay of the Somme the coast is lined with a belt of sand dunes about 2 M. broad, behind which is the Marquenterre, a tract
chief
The river Somme rises to the N.N.E. of St Quentin in the department of Aisne, where it has a course of about 25 m.; it traverses the department of Somme from the south- east
great
east
The mean temperature is lower. than that of Paris (49 F. at Abbeville). The mean annual rainfall is 33 in. at Abbeville. The department, especially in the north-east, is one of the best cultivated in France. Beetroot for sugar is the staple crop of the Peronne arrondissement; cereals, chiefly wheat, fodder
mineral
paper , chemical products, machines and ironmongery, hosiery (in the Santerre), &c. Cereals, horses of the Boulogne or Norman breed, cattle, hemp and linen, and the manufactured goods are the exports of the department. St Valery (pop. 3389) exports vegetables and farm-products (to England), and shingle for the manufacture of earthenware. Besides the raw materials for the manufacturing industries, wines and timber, the latter largely imported at St Valery, dyestuffs and coal are imported.The department is served principally by the Northern railway, and its canals and rivers provide 140 M. of navigable waterway. Administratively the department comprises 5 arrondissements (those of Amiens, the capital , Abbeville, Doullens, Montdidier and Peronne), 41 cantons and 836 communes. The department belongs to the academie (educational circumscription) of Lille, and constitutes the diocese of Amiens, which city is also the seat of a court of appeal and the headquarters of the region of the II. army corps, wherein the department is included.The most noteworthy places are Amiens (the capital ), Abbeville, Montdidier, Peronne, Doullens, St Riquier, Crecy and Ham, which are treated under those headings. The following places may also be mentioned : Albert (pop. 6656), after Amiens and Abbeville the most populous town in the department and a centre for machine construction; Villers-Bretonneux (pop. 4447), a centre of hosiery manufacture; Corbie, once celebrated for its Benedictine
the remains of a chateau of the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries, once one of the chief
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