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PROVINCES OF FRANCE

(Redirected from Province of France)

The Kingdom of 'France' was organised into 'provinces' until March 4, 1790, when the establishment of the ''département'' system superseded provinces. The change was an attempt to eradicate local loyalties based on feudal ownership of land and focus all loyalty on the central government in Paris.
The names of the former provinces are still used by geographers to designate natural regions, and several French administrative regions carry their names.

Contents
The meaning of "province"
List of former provinces of France
''Provinces''
See also

The meaning of "province"


French ''départements'', their names, and their borders were chosen by the central government. In contrast, the existence of provinces came from the ''droit coutumier'' ("customary law") and was merely certified by the state. A province, also called a ''pays'' ("country"), was characterised by the laws that belonged to it. A province itself could encompass several other provinces. For example, Burgundy was a province but Bresse — another province — was nevertheless a part of Burgundy.
There is therefore no official list of provinces. The list of ''généralités'', administrative subdivisions of the kingdom, is often presented when one wants to establish the list of provinces on the eve of the French Revolution. The list below is much larger, encompassing provinces throughout French history.

List of former provinces of France


''Provinces''

'Major Provinces of France' before the Revolution, with provincial capitals marked. Listed as 'English name (capital)'. Cities in bold had provincial "parlements" or "conseils souverains".
1. Île-de-France ('Paris')
2. Berry (Bourges)
3. Orléanais (Orléans)
4. Normandie ('Rouen')
5. Languedoc ('Toulouse')
6. Lyonnais (Lyon)
7. Dauphiné ('Grenoble')
8. Champagne (Troyes)
9. Aunis (La Rochelle)
10. Saintonge (Saintes)
11. Poitou (Poitiers)
12. Guyenne and Gascony ('Bordeaux')
13. Burgundy ('Dijon')
14. Picardy (Amiens)
15. Anjou (Angers)
16. Provence ('Aix-en-Provence')
17. Angoumois (Angoulême)
18. Bourbonnais (Moulins)
19. Marche (Guéret)
20. Brittany ('Rennes')
21. Maine (Le Mans)
22. Touraine (Tours)
23. Limousin (Limoges)
24. Foix (Foix)
25. Auvergne (Clermont-Ferrand)
26. Béarn ('Pau')
27. Alsace (Strasbourg, cons. souv. in 'Colmar')
28. Artois (Arras)
29. Roussillon ('Perpignan')
30. Flanders and Hainaut (Lille, parlement in 'Douai')
31. Franche-Comté ('Besançon')
32. Lorraine ('Nancy')
33. Corsica (off map, Ajaccio, cons. souv. in 'Bastia')
34. Nivernais (Nevers)
35. Comtat Venaissin, a Papal fief
36. Imperial Free City of Mulhouse
37. Savoy, a Sardinian fief
38. Nice, a Sardinian fief
39. Montbéliard, a fief of Württemberg
40. (not pictured) Trois-Évêchés ('Metz', Toul and Verdun).

Provinces of France

=== Parts of France in 1789 ===

Alsace


Basse-Alsace


Haute-Alsace


Sundgau

Angoumois

Anjou


Besugeois


Mauges

Artois


Boulonnais

Aunis

Auvergne

Basse-Navarre

Béarn


Soule

Beaujolais

Berry

Bourbonnais

Burgundy


Autunois


Auxerrois


Auxois


Bassigny


Châlonnois


Charollois


Dijonnais


Mâconnais


Bresse



Bugey



Dombes



Pays de Gex



Valromey

Brittany

Champagne


Brie champenoise


Perthois


Rhemois


Senonais


Vallage

Corsica

Dauphiné


Baronnies


Briançonnois


Champsaur


Diois


Gapençais


Graisivaudan


Embrunais


Valentinois


Viennois

Flanders and Hainaut


Flandre maritime


Flandre wallonne


Hainaut (France)


Cambresis

Pays de Foix


Donnezan

Forez

Franche-Comté

Gascony


Agenois


Armagnac


Bigorre


Comminges


Condomois


Couserans


Estarac


Grave


Lomagne


Marsan


Nébouzan


Quatre-Vallées

Guyenne


Bordelais


Bazadois


Chalosse


Labourd


Lannes


Périgord


Quercy


Rouergue

Île-de-France


Beauvaisis


Brie française


Gâtinais français


Hurepoix


Laonnois


Mantois


Multien


Noyonnais


Omois


Parisis


Pays de France


Quart de Noyon


Soissonnois


Vexin français


Valois

Languedoc


Gévaudan


Principality of Orange


Velay


Vivarais

Landau (Imperial Free City occupied in 1680, restored to Bavaria in 1815)

Limousin

Lorraine


Barrois

Lyonnais


Plat pays de Lyonnais


Lyon


Franc-Lyonnais

Maine

Marche


Combrailles

Nivernais

Normandie


Avranchin


Pays d'Auge


Bessin


Pays de Bray


Campagne de Caen


Pays de Caux


Cotentin


Le Houlme


Lieuvin


Campagne de Neubourg


Pays d'Ouche


Roumois


Campagne de Saint-André


Vexin Normand

Orléanais


Blésois


Pays chartrain


Dunois


Gâtinais orléanais


Vendômois

Perche


Perche-Gouët


Thimerais

Picardy


Amienois


Ponthieu


Santerre


Thiérache


Vermandois


Vimeu

Poitou

Provence

Roussillon


Roussillon


Cerdagne


Conflent


Vallespir


Capcir

Saintonge

Touraine

Trois-Évêchés
=== Provinces not part of France in 1789 ===

Avignon and the Comtat Venaissin, belonging to the Pope were incorporated in 1791

Montbéliard was incorporated in 1793 as part of the Rauracian Republic, to which it belonged briefly.

Mulhouse, an Imperial Free City allied with Switzerland was incorporated in 1798

Savoy and Nice were temporarily annexed to France in the period 1792-1815 but were restored to the Kingdom of Sardinia by the Congress of Vienna. Only in 1860 were they annexed again to France.

★ Several other territories along the northern border of Alsace and Lorraine were also incorporated during the course of the French Revolution.

See also



Lists of unofficial regions by country

Ancien Régime in France

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.