2015-04-12

‎Not proofread: Created page with "<section begin="s1"/>Rodez, called Segodunum under the Gauls, and Ruthena under the Romans, was the capital of the Rutheni, a tribe allied to the Arverni, and was afterwards t..."

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</noinclude><section begin="s1"/>Rodez, called Segodunum under the Gauls, and Ruthena under the

Romans, was the capital of the Rutheni, a tribe allied to the Arverni,

and was afterwards the principal town in the district of Rouergue.

In the 4th century it adopted the Christian faith, and St Amans,

its first bishop, was elected in 401. During the middle ages contests

were rife between the bishops, who held the temporal power in the

" cite, ” and the counts in the “ bourg.” The Albigenses were

defeated near Rodez in 1210. The count ship of Rodez, detached

from that of Rouergue at the end of the 11th century, belonged

first to the viscounts of Carlat, and from the beginning of the 14th

century to the counts of Armagnac. From 1360 to 1368 the English

held the town. After the confiscation of the estates of the Armagnacs

in 1475 the count ship passed to the dukes of Alengon and then to

the D'Albrets. Henry IV. finally annexed it to the crown of France.

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<section begin="s2"/>'''RODGERS, JOHN''' (1771-1838), American sailor, was born in

Harford county, Maryland, on the 11th of July 1771. He

entered the United States navy when it was organized in 1798.

He was second in command to Commodore James Barron

(1769*I8SI) in the expedition against the Barbary pirates,

and succeeded him in the command in 1805. In this year he

brought both Tunis and Tripoli to terms, and then returned to

America. In 1811 he was in command as Commodore of the U.S.

frigate “President”'(44) oh" Annapolis when he heard that an

American seaman had been “pressed” by a British frigate

off Sandy Hook. Commodore Rodgers was ordered to sea

" to protect American commerce, ” but he may have had verbal

instructions to retaliate for the impressment of real or supposed

British subjects out of American vessels, which was causing

much ill-feeling and was a main cause of the War of 1812.

On the 16th of May 1811 he sighted and followed the British

sloop “ Little Belt ” (22), and after some hailing and counter hailing,

of which very different versions are given on either

side, a gun was fired, each side accusing the other of the

aggression, and an action ensued in which the “ Little Belt ”

was cut to pieces. The incident, which was represented as an

accident by the Americans, and believed to be a deliberate

aggression by the British navy, had a share in bringing on

war. When hostilities broke out Rodgers commanded a

squadron on the coast of America, and was wounded by the

bursting of one of his guns while pursuing the British frigate

“ Belvedere.” He was subsequently President of the Board

of Navy Commissioners in 1815-1824 and in 1827-1837, and

acting secretary of the navy in 1823 for two weeks. He died

in Philadelphia on the 1st of August 1838.

His brother, George Washington Rodgers (1787-1832), a

brother-in-law of Commodore Perry, served in the War of 1812

and in the war with Algiers (1815). Rear-Admiral John Rodgers

(1812~1882), a son of Commodore John Rodgers, served in the

Union navy and in 1877-1882 was superintendent of the Naval

Observatory at Washington. G. W. Rodgers had two sons

who were naval officers, Christopher Raymond Perry Rodgers

(1819-1892) and George Washington Rodgers (182 2-1863).

RODIN, AUGUSTE (1840-), French sculptor, was born

in 1840, in Paris, and at an early age displayed a taste for his

art. He began by attending Barye's classes, but did not yield

too completely to his influence. From 1864 to 1870, under

pressure of necessity, he was employed in the studio of Carrier-Belleuse,

where he learnt to deal with the mechanical difficulties

of a sculptor. Even so early as 1864 his individuality was

manifested in his “ Man with a Broken Nose.” After the war,

finding nothing to do in Paris, Rodin went to Brussels, where

from 1871 to 1877 he worked, as the colleague of the Belgian

artist Van Rasbourg, on the sculpture for the outside and the

caryatid es for the interior of the Bourse, besides exhibiting

in 1875 a “ Portrait bf Garnier.” In 1877 he contributed to

the Salon “ The Bronze Age, ” which was seen again, cast in

bronze, at the Salon of 1880, when it took a third-class medal,

was purchased by the State, and is now in the museum of the

Luxembourg. Between 1882 and 1885 he sent to the Salons

busts of “ Jean-Paul Laurens ” and “ Carrier-Belleuse ” (1882),

“ Victor Hugo ” and “ Dalou ” (1884), and “ Antonin Proust ”

(1885). From about this time he chiefly devoted himself to

a great decorative composition six metres high, which was not

finished for twenty years. This is the “ Portal of Hell, ” the

most elaborate perhaps of all Rodin's works, executed to order

for the Musée des arts décoratifs. It is inspired mainly by

Dante's Inferno, the poet himself being seated at the top,

while at his feet, in under-cut relief, we see the writhing crowd

of the damned, torn by the frenzy of passion and the anguish

of despair. The lower part consists of two bas-reliefs, in their

midst two masks of tormented faces. Round these run figures

of women and centaurs. Above the door three men cling to

each other in an attitude'of despair. After beginning this

titanic undertaking, and while continuing to work on it, Rodin

executed for the town of Damvillers a statue of “ Bastien-Lepage

”; for Nancy a “Monument to Claude le Lorrain, "

representing the Chariot of the Sun drawn by horses; and for

Calais “ The Burgesses of Calais ” surrendering the keys of the

town and imploring mercy. In this, Rodin, throwing over

all school tradition, represents the citizens not as grouped on a

square or circular plinth, but walking in file. This work was

exhibited at the Petit Gallery in 1889. At the time of the

secession of the National Society of Fine Arts, or New Salon, in

1890, Rodin withdrew from the old Society of French Artists,

and exhibited in the New Salon the bust of his friend “ Puvis

de Chavannes ” (1892), “ Contemplation ” and a “ Caryatid, "

both in marble, and the “ Monument to Victor Hugo ” (1897),

intended for the gardens of the Luxembourg. In this the poet

is represented nude, as a powerful old man extending his right

arm with a sovereign gesture, the Muses standing behind

him. In 1898 Rodin exhibited two very dissimilar works,

“ The Kiss, ” exhibited again in 1900, a marble group representing

Paolo Malatesta and Francesca da Rimini, and the sketch

in plaster for a “ Statue of Balzac.” This statue, a commission

from the Society of Men of Letters, had long been expected,

and was received with vehement dissensions. Some critics

regarded this'work, in which Balzac was represented in his

voluminous dressing-gown, as the first-fruits of a new phase

of sculpture; others, on the contrary, declared that it was

incomprehensible, if not ridiculous. This was the view taken

by the society who had ordered it, and who “ refused to recognize

Rodin's rough sketch as a statue of Balzac, ” and withdrew the

commission, giving it to the sculptor Falguiére. Falguiére

exhibited his model in 1899. In the same Salon, Rodin, to prove

that the conduct of the society had made no change in his friendship with Falguiére, exhibited a bust in bronze of his rival,

as well as one of “ Henri Rochefort.” In 1900, the city of Paris,

to do honour to Rodin, erected at its own expense a building

close to one of the entrances to the Great Exhibition, in which

almost all of the works of the artist were to be seen, more

especially the great “ Portal of Hell, ” still quite incomplete,

the “ Balzac, ” and ahost of other works, many of them unfinished

or mere rough sketches. Here, too, were to be seen some of

Rodin's designs, studies and water-colour drawings. He has

also executed a great many etchings and sgrajiti on porcelain

for the manufactory at Sevres. His best-known etching is the

portrait of Victor Hugo. Many of Rodin's works are in private

collections, and at the Luxembourg he is represented by a

“ Danaid ” (in marble), a “Saint John” (in bronze, 1880),

“ She who made the Helmet” (bronze statuette), the busts of

“ J. P. Laurens ” and of “ A Lady ” and other works. In the

Musée Galliera is a very fine bust of Victor Hugo. Rodin's

“Hand of God ” was exhibited in the New Gallery, London,

in IQOS. In 1904 Mr Ernest Beckett (Lord Grimthorpe) presented

the British nation with the sculptor's “ Le Penseur.”

In the same year Rodin became president of the International

Society of Sculptors, Painters and Engravers, in succession to

James McNeill Whistler.

See SCULPTURE (Modern French); also Geffroy, La Vie artistigue

(Paris, 1892, 1893, 1899, 1900); L. Maillard, Rodin (Paris, 1899);

La Plume, Rodin et son aeuore (Paris, 1900); Alexandre, Le Balzac

de Rodin (Paris, 1898); H. Boutet, Dix dessins ohoisis de Auguste

Rodin (1904); R. Dircks, Auguste Rodin (1904); H. Duhem, Auguste

Rodin (1903); C. Black, Auguste Rodin: the Man, his Ideas and

his Works (1905).

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<section begin="s3"/>'''RODNEY, GEORGE BRYDGES RODNEY''', BARON (1718-1792), English admiral, second son of Henry Rodney of<section end="s3"/><noinclude>{{smallrefs}}</div></noinclude>

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