VENDME


Meaning of VENDME in English

historic town and capital of an arrondissement in the dpartement of Loir-et-Cher, Centre rgion, north-central France. It lies southwest of Paris and 20 miles (30 km) northwest of Blois. Vendme stands on the Loir River, which there divides and intersects the town. To the south stands a hill on which are ruins of the 11th-century castle of the counts (later dukes) of Vendme. The town was extensively damaged during World War II but was thereafter largely restored. The local industry is diversified and includes household appliances, computers, printing, control and measurement apparatus, and food processing. The Roman Vindocinum was a provincial fortification of Gaul, replaced later by a feudal castle, around which the town arose. Christianity was introduced by St. Bienheur in the 5th century, and the important Abbey of the Trinity was founded about 1030. When the reign of the Capetian dynasty began, Vendme was the chief town of a countship belonging to Bouchard, called the Venerable. The succession passed by various marriages to the houses of Nevers, Preuilly, Montoire, and Bourbon. The countship of Vendme was raised to the rank of a duchy and peerage of France for Charles de Bourbon (1515); his son Anthony, king of Navarre, was the father of Henry IV, who gave the duchy of Vendme in 1598 to his natural son Csar (15941665), in whose line the dukedom continued for more than a century. The last of the family in the male line (16541712) was Louis XIV's famous general, Louis-Joseph, Duke de Vendme. Pop. (1990) 18,359.

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