City on the Eure River in North-Western France, in the historical region of Orléanais. Now it is the capital of Eure-et-Loir dept. (1990 pop. 41,850).
Chartres is of great historic and artistic interest; it is also a regional
market with many industries, including metallurgy, and the production of
perfumes and electronic equipment. An ancient town, it was the probable
site of the great assemblies of the druids. The Normans burned it in 858.
During the Middle Ages Chartres was the seat of a countship; it became
a possession of the French crown in 1286. Francis I made it a duchy in
1528. Chartres’ fame today stems largely from its magnificent Gothic Cathedral
of Notre Dame (12th to 13th cent.), remarkable for its two spires (375
ft/114 m and 350 ft/107 m), its stained glass windows, and its superb sculpture.
It is widely considered to be the finest Gothic cathedral in the world.
Henry Adams in Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres made it a symbol of
the medieval spirit. Inside the cathedral St. Bernhard of Clairvaux preached
the Second Crusade (1146) and Henry IV was crowned king of France (1594).
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