词条 | Compiègne |
释义 | Compiègne France town, Oise département, Picardy région, northern France. It lies along the Oise River, at the northwest edge of the forest of Compiègne. Of Roman origin, it was referred to in 557 as Compendium, a name derived from a word meaning “short cut” (between Beauvais and Soissons). The town flourished in the Middle Ages and was the site of assemblies and councils under the Merovingian kings. In 833 Louis the Pious was deposed there. Charles II the Bald enlarged the town and founded the Abbey of Saint-Corneille, now the home of the municipal library. Compiègne became a commune in 1153, and a monument to Joan of Arc commemorates her capture there by the Burgundians in 1430. ![]() ![]() Compiègne was the headquarters of the invading German army in the Franco-German War of 1870–71 and was occupied by the Germans again in World War I. The Armistice was signed on Nov. 11, 1918, in Marshal Ferdinand Foch's personal railway coach on a siding just northeast of the town. The coach was preserved as a monument, and on June 22, 1940, during World War II, the Franco-German armistice was signed in it, in Adolf Hitler's presence. The Germans removed the coach to Germany but destroyed it in April 1945 to prevent its recovery by the advancing Allies. Compiègne is now an important tourist centre. Its varied industries include pharmaceuticals, metal founding, and the manufacture of soap, glass, machinery, and automobile tires. It also has an expanding technical university. Pop. (1999) city, 41,254; urban area, 108,234; (2004 est.) city, 42,300. |
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