Agrippa,220Agrippa, Marcus Vispanius,223Ahenobarbus, Domitius,256Aix,117Albi,38Alix, Princess,153Alphonse of Aragon, Duke,102Alpilles, Les (Little Alps),127Alyscamps, The,202Amphitheatre of Arles,180Andrew, son of Carobert, King of Hungary,21,22Arausio,258Arles,175;legend of the betrothal feast given by King Nannos,176;amphitheatre built,179;discovery of the Venus of Arles,183;removal of the town from the arena,188;gladiators encouraged by Julius Cæsar,190;restoring of the ruined theatre,194;theatres of the Greeks,195;tombs found in the Alyscamps,198;inscriptions on tombs,199;tomb of Julia Tyrannia,199;rebuilding of the Church of St. Honorat,203;the Cathedral of St. Trophimus built in the twelfth century,206;the monster “Tarasque,”207;the combining of Pagan and Christian arts and religions,208;obelisk found in the ancient Roman circus,211;the Place du Forum,212;Mistral the poet,213,214Arnaud,140Auguste, Porte d’,237Avignon (City of the Popes), or Avenio,13;“Babylonish Captivity,” the,15;threatened by Romans,24;Roman monuments,25;setting up of a Republic,26;paintings and frescoes,29;legend of the Bridge of Avignon,34,35;siege in 1226,37;conflict of the faiths,38;Raymond humiliated,39;re-excommunication of Raymond,40;work of restoration,44;restoration of paintings of the fourteenth century,48;restoration of pictures, sculpture, and buildings,49,50,51;main door to chapel unearthed,51;soldiers sent by Charles V. to drive Pierre de Luna from the place,56;fortress stormed by King’s troops,57;gunpowder treason,58;massacre in the Glacière,59,63;the White Terror of 1815,64;revolutionists of the South,62;garrison of the Republicans shot down by Royalist Volunteers,63;Marshal Brune shot,65;Place de l’Hôtel de Ville,71Barthelasse,31,72Baux, Les,127;the approach over Les Alpilles,127;canal dug across La Crau,130;restoration of the Château in 1444,133;Langue d’Oc, or Provençal, used until well on into the fifteenth century,134;romance of a Jongleur,136;Court of Queen Jeanne, where women were judges,141;Guillaume deCabestan slain by Raymond,144;excavations made in crypt of the Church of St. Vincent,145;origin of the name of Porcelets,151;Grotto of the Fairies,152;two relics of the Roman times,254Baux, Des,131Baux, Raymond de, Prince of Orange,255Beaucaire, Count,111Belvezet, Our Lady of,87Benedict XI.,18Benedict XII.,43Benedict XIII. (Pierre de Luna),56,266Bérengère, Princess,142Bernas, Jacques,269Bertrand de Goth, d’Agoust, Archbishop of Bordeaux,18Boucicaut, Marshal,56Brune, Marshal,65Cabestan, Guillaume de,142,144Cæsar, Julius,257Caius,224,280Calvert Museum,25Camargue, La,202Carpentras,63,265Cavalier Mountain,219Charlemagne,160Charles I. of Anjou,21Charles VI.,237Charles IX.,204Chevaliers, Hall of the,83Choisi, General,60Claud, Archbishop of Turin,37Claud II.,150Clement V.,18,21,265Clement VI.,22,43,55Coupetête, Jourdain,59Crau, La,128,130“Crucifixion,”52Daniel,140Daudet,97Diana, Temple of,235Durazzo, Charles, Duke of,24Église de l’Observance,270Escuyer, L’,60Fairies, Grotto of the,152Feuchiers, Boulevard,245Flouquet,140Forum, Place du,215Garde Robe,48Geoffrey VI.,168Glanum Livii,275Gregory XI.,56Grottes, Rue des, Avignon,25Henry IV.,240“Holy Cross,” Chapel of the,159,162Innocent III., Pope,38Innocent VI.,88Joanna,21,23John XXII., Pope (Jacques d’Euse),30Jongleurs,136Jourdain (Coupetête),59,60Julii,280Languedoc,88Lapidaire, Musée,232“Last Judgment,”52Laval, Jean de,133Leibulfe, Count,132Louis of Hungary,22Louis XI.,123Louis XIV.,225,259Louis XVI.,164Lucius,224Massilia (Marseilles),175Manvilles, Hôtel de,150Maries, Les,154Marius,257Martel, Charles,160,229Mignard,268Monaco, Hôtel, or Monte Carlo, Hôtel de,146Montmajour,159;dedication of the Chapel of the Holy Cross by Charlemagne,159;outbreak of the Revolution,164;Confessional of St. Trophimus,165;customary offering of sturgeon to Geoffrey VI.,168;Benedictine Monastery of,171;legend of the foundation of the Monastery,172Montmorency, Château de,105Nannos, King (Nan),176Napoleon,225Nero, Claudius Tiberius,179Nicolète,110Nîmes (Nemausus),219;the Celtic tribe conquered by the Romans,220;baths built in the first century,220;coins “pied du sanglier,”222;building of Pont du Gard,223;the great Arena erected,224;the Maison Carrée built during the first years of Christian era,224;Arthur Young’s description of the Maison Carrée,226;building of town in Arena,229;description of the Temple of Diana,235;Tour Magne 350 feet above sea-level,238;legend of Golden Cock,239;customs of the evolutionary South,245;legend of the Pont du Gard,249Nostradamus,239,275Notre Dame des Doms, the Cathedral of,26Octavius,257Octavius, Augustus,223Orange, Princes of,259Orange,253;the Triumphal Arch, an important monument of Roman times,253;theories as to the origin of the Triumphal Arch,256;stupendous wall forming back of the proscenium of Roman theatre,259,260;Princes of Orange converted theatre into fortress,261;two rival Popes tried and deposed,267;ancient bits of masonry utilised in modern buildings,278;tomb of the Julii,280Orgon,275Palace of the Popes,26,44Papal Palace,67Papal Throne,29Parrocel,268Penitents, Black,62Penitents, White,62Périgueux, Bishop of,124Peter of Castelnau,38Petrarch,15Philip the Fair of France,16Philippe, Louis,89Phoceans,24Pierre de Luna,83Pity, Our Lady of,277Pius, Antoninus,224Place Fortin,146Pointre,65Pontiff,30Porcelets,150“Prophets, The,”52Rambert, Abbé,161,166Raymond VI., Count of Toulouse,38Remoulins,246René, Château,98,111René, King (King of Naples),100,116,133Rhone Valley,14Richard Cœur de Lion,140Rioni,67Rocher des Doms,31Rock of the Doms,26Sacrovir, Julius,258St. André, Fort,82St. André, Fortress,84St. Anne, Church of,197St. Anthony,90St. Baudile,241St. Benezet, Bridge of,31,56St. Castor,241St. Etienne, Church of,203St. Francis d’Assisi,120St. Fronto,124St. Honorat, Church of,203St. Martha,28,117St. Martha, Church of,115St. Martial, Chapel of,47St. Paul,241St. Perpetué,241St. Pierre, Place,25St. Remy,127,276St. Roland, Tower of,193St. Ruf,28,36St. Trophimus, Church of,199Salle Brulle,58Salle du Garde,108Sebastiani, Colonel,48Septimus Severus, Arch of,254Seville, Archbishop of,58Suetonius,256Tarascon,97;the famous Tartarin penned by Daudet banned,98;King René involved in a series of complications,100;marriage of King René’s daughter,103;description of interior of Castle,106;the story of Aucassin and Nicolète,108;legend of the Tarasc,115;King René’s vision,116;St. Martha’s triumph over the Tarasc,118;pageant prohibited in 1904,119;reproduction of the reliquary given up in the starvation times of the great Revolution,123“Tarasque,”118Tartarin and Tarascon,97Theodoric, King,189Tiberius,258Toledo, Archbishop of,58Toulouse,40Trucat,239Turenne, Countess of,24Tyrannia, Julia,199Uzès, Duchesse d’,228Valdenses (Albigenses),37Valence, Count de,109Valfenier, de,93Vandemont, Count,102Vanloo,120Ventoux, Mount,112Venus of Arles, The,183Vidal,140Villegis, King,172Villeneuve,31;approach to the town,75;battlements of fortresses and castles,75;stone seat,81;indication of prisoners’ thoughts,84;the Monastery of the Chartreuse founded by Innocent VI.,88;Monastery of Chartreuse destroyed by lightning,93Ville, Hôtel de, Orange,262,272Visigoths, The,229,282Voltaire, Rue,184Young, Arthur,225
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