Tours

Tours
/toor/; Fr. /toohrdd/, n.
a city in and the capital of Indre-et-Loire, in W France, on the Loire River: Charles Martel defeated the Saracens near here A.D. 732. 145,441.

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I
City (pop., 1999: 132,820), northwest-central France.

Gallic tribes inhabited the site before the Roman conquest. In the 3rd century AD it was made an episcopal see, but the Christian community remained small until St. Martin became bishop in the 4th century; a magnificent basilica was raised above his tomb in the late 5th century, attracting pilgrims for hundreds of years. In the 5th century Tours became part of the Frankish dominion; Charles Martel defeated Moorish invaders nearby at the Battle of Tours/Poitiers in 732. Under Alcuin it developed as a centre of learning. Though it prospered in the Middle Ages, it declined with the 17th-century emigration of the Protestant Huguenots. It was the seat of French government during the siege of Paris (1870) in the Franco-Prussian War. The chief tourist hub for the Loire valley, Tours still has the remains of the basilica of St. Martin. Tours is the birthplace of Honore de Balzac.
II
(as used in expressions)
Gregory of Tours Saint
Martin of Tours Saint

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France
Introduction
 city, capital of Indre-et-Loire département, Centre région, west-central France, on the Loire River. It is the chief tourist centre for the Loire Valley and its historic châteaus.

History
      Early records show that the Gallic tribe of the Turones (a pre-Roman tribal group) settled on the right bank of the Loire River. The Romans moved the settlement across the river and called it Caesarodunum, but from the 5th century it was known as Civitas Turonorum. The settlement was evangelized in the mid-3rd century by the early Christian ecclesiastic and missionary Gatien, who founded the bishopric. The Christian community remained small, however, until the second half of the 4th century, when St. Martin (Martin of Tours, Saint), the great apostle of the Gauls, was persuaded to become their bishop. A magnificent basilica was raised above his tomb in the late 5th century, and for hundreds of years it attracted pilgrims to Tours.

      When the town became part of the Frankish dominion under Clovis I (reigned 481/482–511), Clovis accepted for himself and his successors the title of canon of St. Martin. At the end of the 6th century the bishopric was held by St. Gregory of Tours (Gregory of Tours, Saint), who had an abbey built around St. Martin's basilica. The abbey grew immensely rich. The emperor Charlemagne (reigned 768–814) reestablished discipline in the monastery and developed the intellectual life under the English scholar Alcuin. After pillaging incursions by the Normans, a protective wall was built around the St. Martin's district, which 400 years later was united to the borough of Tours, when a common wall was built around both Tours and Châteauneuf (originally St. Martin's district and known as Martinopolis).

      At a point somewhere between Tours and Poitiers is the site of the Battle of Tours (Tours, Battle of); there, in 732, Charles Martel, master of the Frankish kingdom, defeated Moorish invaders from Spain in a battle that proved to be the turning point in the advance of Islam into western Europe. The battle is believed by some historians to have been fought at Moussais-la-Bataille, 6 miles (10 km) southwest of Châtellerault.

      Tours continued to maintain its prosperity in the Middle Ages in spite of involvement in the strife between the French and English kings in the 12th century and later during the Hundred Years' War (1337–1453). In 1462 Louis XI established a civic council and a silk industry that thrived for more than a century. The emigration of Huguenots (a Protestant group) after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes (Nantes, Edict of) (1685) resulted in industrial decline. During the French Revolution of the late 18th century, the town was a base for operations against the royalist Vendée rebels. During World War II the French government had its headquarters in Tours from June 13 to 15, 1940, and British statesman Winston Churchill met French premier Paul Reynaud there in a vain attempt to dissuade France from negotiating an armistice with Germany. In the 1944 bombardments that preceded the German retreat and the liberation, one-fourth of the city was destroyed.

The contemporary city
      The modern-day city of Tours presents sharp contrasts in its buildings and architectural styles. The town hall, finished in 1904, is typical of its time, pompous and slightly overpowering. Outside the central square the cathedral of Saint-Gatien sums up four centuries of French religious architecture: the choir is from the 13th century, the nave marks a transition between Flamboyant Gothic and Renaissance styles, and the facade was built from 1426 to 1547. Another contrast is found south of the Loire River and west of the rue Nationale, in the town's old section where cobbled streets and ancient houses are preserved. The Museum of Fine Arts in the former 17th–18th-century archiepiscopal palace has a rich collection of paintings.

      Since the 1960s Tours has expanded rapidly, initially as a result of the decentralization of Parisian industry. This was accompanied by rapid suburban development, notably to the south. Tours now has an important and diversified industrial sector, which includes the manufacture of electronics, machinery, foodstuffs, and pharmaceuticals. The city is also an administrative and commercial centre, and much of it has been refurbished with offices and retail outlets. The vast, modern Vinci Conference Centre designed by French architect Jean Nouvel (1991–93) is also in the city centre. In addition to the University of Tours, the city is home to medical and pharmaceutical research institutions. Tours is linked to Paris by high-speed train. Pop. (1999) 132,820; (2005 est.) 136,400.

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Universalium. 2010.

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