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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > French Political Geography > France
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France, French Political Geography

Related Category: French Political Geography

France[frans, Fr. frANs] Pronunciation Key - Land

Although France's old historic provinces were abolished by the Revolution, they remain the country's basic geographic, cultural, and economic divisions. These provinces mirror France's natural geographic regions and, despite modern administrative centralization, retain their striking diversity. The heart of France N of the Loire River is the province of Ile-de-France, which occupies the greater part of the Paris basin, a fertile depression drained by the Seine and Marne rivers. The basin is surrounded by the provinces of Champagne and Lorraine in the east; Artois, Picardy, French Flanders (see Nord dept.), and Normandy in the northeast and north; Brittany, Maine, and Anjou in the west; and Touraine, OrlEanais, Nivernais, and Burgundy in the south. Further south are Berry and Bourbonnais. Further east, between the Vosges Mts. and the Rhine, is Alsace; S of Alsace, along the Jura, is Franche-ComtE.

South-central France is occupied by the rugged mountains of the Massif Central, one of the country's major natural features. It comprises the provinces of Marche, Limousin, Auvergne, and Lyonnais. To the E of the RhOne River, which divides the Massif Central from the Alps, are Savoy, DauphinE, and Provence. The French Alps have some of the highest peaks in Europe, including Mont Blanc. The RhOne valley widens into a plain near its delta on the Mediterranean; part of the coast of Provence forms the celebrated French Riviera. Languedoc extends from the Cevennes Mts. to the Mediterranean coast W of the RhOne. Corsica lies off the Mediterranean coast. The southwestern part of France comprises the small Pyrenean provinces of Roussillon, Foix, BEarn, and French Navarre and the vast provinces of Gascony and Guienne. The last two constitute the great Aquitanian plain, drained by the Garonne and Dordogne rivers, which flow into the Bay of Biscay. The central section of the west coast, between the Gironde estuary and the Loire, is occupied by the provinces of Saintonge, Angoumois, Aunis, and Poitou.

Since 1972 France has been administratively divided into 22 regions, many of which correspond to the nation's historical provinces. These regions are: Alsace, Aquitane, Auvergne, Basse-Normandie, Bourgogne (Burgundy), Bretagne (Brittany), Centre, Champagne-Ardenne, Corse (Corsica), Franche-ComtE, Haute-Normandie, Ile-de-France, Languedoc-Roussillon, Limousin, Lorraine, Midi-Pyrenees, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, Pays de la Loire, Picardie (Picardy), Poitou-Charentes, Provence-Alpes-COte d'Azur, and Rhone-Alpes.

France also has a number of overseas departments and territories which, legally, are part of the French Republic. The overseas departments are Martinique, Guadeloupe, REunion, and French Guiana. The overseas territories are New Caledonia, French Polynesia, Wallis and Futuna Islands, and the French Southern and Antarctic Territories. France's territorial collectivities include Mayotte and St. Pierre and Miquelon.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Agincourt
Albigenses
Algeria
Alsace
Angevin
Angoumois
Anjou
Anne of Brittany
Aquitaine
Arianism
Arles
Armagnacs and Burgundians
Arras, Treaty of
Artois
Alphonse Aulard
Aunis
Austrasia
Austrian Succession, War of the
Auvergne
Edouard Balladur
Basques
Bayonne, town, France
BEarn
Berry, former province, France
Georges Bidault
Marc Bloch
Blois
LEon Blum
Bordeaux
Georges Ernest Boulanger
Bourbon
Bourbonnais
Bouvines
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BrEtigny, Treaty of
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Aristide Briand
Brittany
Burgundy
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Charles Alexandre de Calonne
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Carolingians
Cateau-CambrEsis, Treaty of
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Champagne, region and former province, France
Channel Tunnel
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Charles X, king of France
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Cherbourg
Jacques RenE Chirac
Georges Clemenceau
Clermont-Ferrand
Clovis I
Cluniac order
Code NapolEon
Cognac
Jean Baptiste Colbert
commune, in medieval history
Commune of Paris
Consulate
Corsica
CrEcy
Crusades
Dagobert I
Edouard Daladier
Jean FranCois Darlan
DauphinE
Charles de Gaulle
Devolution, War of
Dienbienphu
Dijon
Directory
Dreyfus Affair
Bertrand Du Guesclin
Dunkirk, town, France
Dutch Wars
Edward III
Eleanor of Aquitaine
Enlightenment
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European Monetary System
European Union
farming, in taxation
Fashoda Incident
February Revolution, in French history
feudalism
Flanders
AndrE Hercule de Fleury
Foix
Franche-ComtE
Francis I, king of France
Francis II, king of France
Franco-Prussian War
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French Community
French Guiana
French literature
French Polynesia
French Revolution
French Revolutionary Wars
French Union
Fronde
Rulers of France since 987 (table)
Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges
Gallic Wars
Gascony
Gaul
ValEry Giscard d'Estaing
Grand Alliance, War of the
Grenoble
Guadeloupe
Jules Guesde
Guienne
Guise
FranCois Guizot
Gabriel Hanotaux
Havre, Le
Henry II, king of England
Henry II, king of France
Henry III, king of France
Henry IV, king of France
Henry V, king of England
Edouard Herriot
Ho Chi Minh
Holy Alliance
Hugh Capet
Huguenots
Hundred Years War
Ile-de-France, region, France
Indochina
Italian Wars
Jacquerie
Jean JaurEs
Joan of Arc
John II, king of France
Lionel Robert Jospin
July Revolution
June Days
Alain JuppE
Knights Templars, in medieval history
Languedoc
Pierre Laval
Ernest Lavisse
League
Georges Lefebvre
Jean-Marie Le Pen
Emile Levasseur
Lille
Limousin
Locarno Pact
Etienne Charles LomEnie de Brienne
Lorraine
Lothair I
Louis X, king of France
Louis XI, king of France
Louis XII, king of France
Louis XIII, king of France
Louis XIV, king of France
Louis XV, king of France
Louis XVI, king of France
Louis XVIII, king of France
Louis I, emperor of the West
Louis VI, king of France
Louis VII, king of France
Louis IX, king of France
Louis the German
Louis Philippe
Louvois, FranCois Michel Le Tellier, marquis de
Achille Luchaire
Lyonnais
Lyons, city, France
Marie EdmE Patrice de MacMahon
Maine, region and former province, France
manorial system
Etienne Marcel
Marche, region and former province, France
Marseilles
Marshall Plan
Martinique
FrEdEric Masson
Albert Mathiez
Mayotte
Jules Mazarin
Pierre MendEs-France
mercantilism
Merovingians
Metz
Jules Michelet
Middle Ages
Mississippi Scheme
FranCois Maurice Mitterrand
Morocco, country, Africa
Munich Pact
Nantes
Nantes, Edict of
Napoleon I
Napoleon III
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Navarre
Jacques Necker
Neustria
New Caledonia
Nice
NImes
Nivernais
Nord
Normandy
Norsemen
OrlEanais
OrlEans, city, France
papacy
Paris, city, France
parlement
Pepin the Short
Henri Philippe PEtain
Philip II, king of France
Philip IV, king of France
Philip V, king of France
Philip VI, king of France
Philip the Good
physiocrats
Picardy
Raymond PoincarE
Poitiers
Poitou
Georges Jean Raymond Pompidou
Provence
Pyrenees, Peace of the
Alfred Nicolas Rambaud
Reign of Terror
Reims
Religion, Wars of
REunion
Paul Reynaud
Richelieu, Armand Jean du Plessis, duc de
Riviera
Maximilien Marie Isidore Robespierre
Rollo
Roubaix
Rouen
Roussillon
Ruhr
Saint-Etienne
Saint-Nazaire
Saintonge
Savoy
scholasticism
Seven Years War
Sorbonne
Spanish Succession, War of the
States-General
Stavisky Affair
Saint Pierre and Miquelon
Strasbourg
Sully, Maximilien de BEthune, duc de
Hippolyte Adolphe Taine
Adolphe Thiers
Thirty Years War
Maurice Thorez
Toulon
Toulouse
Touraine
Tours
Triple Alliance and Triple Entente
Troyes
Troyes, Treaty of
Anne Robert Jacques Turgot
Valois, royal house of France
Vercingetorix
Verdun, Treaty of
Versailles
Versailles, Treaty of
Vichy
Vienna, Congress of
Visigoths
FranCois Marie Arouet de Voltaire
Wallis and Futuna Islands
Westphalia, Peace of

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