Gisors: Wikis

  
  

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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 01, 2012 18:14 UTC (49 seconds ago)

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Coordinates: 49°16′52″N 1°46′38″E / 49.2811111111°N 1.77722222222°E / 49.2811111111; 1.77722222222

Commune of Gisors

Gisors 1.jpg
Saint-Gervais-Saint-Protais church as seen from the castle.
Location
Gisors is located in France
Gisors
Administration
Country France
Region Haute-Normandie
Department Eure
Arrondissement Les Andelys
Canton Gisors
Intercommunality Gisors-Epte-Lévrière
Mayor Marcel Larmanou
(2001–2008)
Statistics
Elevation 47–142 m (150–470 ft)
(avg. 74 m/240 ft)
Land area1 16.67 km2 (6.44 sq mi)
Population2 10,882  (1999 census)
 - Density 653 /km2 (1,690 /sq mi)
Miscellaneous
INSEE/Postal code 27284/ 27140
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
2 Population sans doubles comptes: residents of multiple communes (e.g., students and military personnel) only counted once.

Gisors is a commune in the metropolitan area of Paris, France. It is located 62.9 km (39.1 mi). (39.1 miles) northwest from the center of Paris.

Gisors, together with the neighbouring communes of Trie-Château and Trie-la-Ville, form an urban area of 12,669 inhabitants (1999 census). This urban area is a satellite town of Paris.

Contents

Geography

Gisors is located in the Vexin normand region of Normandy at the confluence of the Epte, Troesne and Réveillon rivers .

Transport

Gisors is served by Gisors – Embranchement station on the Transilien Paris – Saint-Lazare suburban rail line and on regional rail lines.

Sites and monuments

Notes

  1. ^ Bradford Smith, The Foundations of the West - Course Material, Chapter 8 The Age of the Crusades - The Rise of France under Philip Augustus and of St. Louis Oglethorpe University, Summer 2000.
  2. ^ Nicholas Vincent, "William Marshal, King Henry II and the Honour of Chateauroux", in: Archives: The Journal of the British Record Association vol. 25, no. 102 (2000).
  3. ^ A Thirteenth-Century Minstrel's Chronicle, a translation by Robert Levine of the Récits d'un ménestrel de Reims, a thirteenth-century historical fiction, Mellen Press, Lewiston, 1990.

External links


1911 encyclopedia

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From LoveToKnow 1911

GISORS, a town of France, in the department of Eure, situated in the pleasant valley of the Epte, 44 m. N.W. of Paris on the railway to Dieppe. Pop. (1906) 4345. Gisors is dominated by a feudal stronghold built chiefly by the kings of England in the 11th and 12th centuries. The outer enceinte, to which is attached a cylindrical donjon erected by Philip Augustus, king of France, embraces an area of over 7 acres. On a mound in the centre of this space rises an older donjon, octagonal in shape, protected by another enceinte. The outer ramparts and the ground they enclose have been converted into promenades. The church of St Gervais dates in its oldest parts - the central tower, the choir and parts of the aisles - from the middle of the 13th century, when it was founded by Blanche of Castile. The rest of the church belongs to the Renaissance period. The Gothic and Renaissance styles mingle in the west façade, which, like the interior of the building, is adorned with a profusion of sculptures; the fine carving on the wooden doors of the north and west portals is particularly noticeable. The less interesting buildings of the town include a wooden house of the Renaissance era, an old convent now used as an hotel de ville, and a handsome modern hospital. There is a statue of General de Blanmont, born at Gisors in 1770. Among the industries of Gisors are felt manufacture, bleaching, dyeing and leather-dressing.

In the middle ages Gisors was capital of the Vexin. Its position on the frontier of Normandy caused its possession to be hotly contested by the kings of England and France during the 12th century, at the end of which it and the dependent fortresses of Neaufles and Dangu were ceded by Richard Ceeur de Lion to Philip Augustus. During the wars of religion of the 16th century it was occupied by the duke of Mayenne on behalf of the League, and in the 17th century, during the Fronde, by the duke of Longueville. Gisors was given to Charles Auguste Fouquet in 1718 in exchange for Belle-Ile-en-Mer and made a duchy in 1742. It afterwards came into the possession of the count of Eu and the duke of Penthievre.


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