2015-06-16

‎Not proofread: Created page with "<section begin="s1"/>Nogent preserves three Gothic churches and the remains of the old priory of St Denis, and there are statues of General St Pol, killed at Sevastopol, and o..."

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</noinclude><section begin="s1"/>Nogent preserves three Gothic churches and the remains of the

old priory of St Denis, and there are statues of General St Pol,

killed at Sevastopol, and of the poet Rémy Belleau (16th century),

a native of the town. The town has a sub-prefecture, a tribunal

of first instance, a communal college and institution for deaf

mutes.

<section end="s1"/>

<section begin="s2"/>'''NOGENT-SUR-MARNE''', a. town of northern France, in the department of Seine, on a hill on the right bank of the Marne, 6 m. E. of Paris by rail. Pop. (1906) 11,463. The Eastern railway here crosses the Marne valley by a viaduct 875 yds. in

length. N ogent has a Gothic church, with a tower of the Romanesque

period, in front of which there is a monument to Watteau,

who died here in 1721. Chemical products are manufactured.

The fine situation of the town gained it the name of Beauté, and

Charles V. built a chateau here (demolished in the 18th century)

which was presented by Charles VII. to Agnes Sorel with the

title of Dame de Beauté. An island in the Marne to the south of

the town is still known as the Ile de Beauté.

<section end="s2"/>

<section begin="s3"/>'''NOGENT-SUR-SEINE''', a town of north-central France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of Aube, on the left

bank of the Seine, 3 5 m. N.W. of Troyes on the Paris-Belfort line.

Pop. (1906) 3791. The river at this point forms an island,

which supports a stone bridge of the 17th century. The chief

building is the church of St Laurent (1421-1 554). A lateral

portal in the flamboyant style and the Renaissance tower at the

west end are of great beauty. The town is the seat of a sub prefect

and has a tribunal of first instance. There is trade in

grain, flour, fodder, wood and cattle. Nogen-sur-Seine was in

1814 the scene of nghting between the French and Austrians.

<section end="s3"/>

<section begin="s4"/>'''NOGI, KITEN,''' COUNT (1849-), japanese general, was

born in Choshu. He commanded a brigade at the battle of

Kinchow (1894) and the subsequent capture of Port Arthur

from the Chinese; but the most memorable events of his career were the siege of Port Arthur by the third army corps of Japan under his command in the Russo-japanese War (1904-5), and the great flanking march made by the same army in the battle of Mukden.

<section end="s4"/>

<section begin="s5"/>'''NOIRMOUTIER''', an island of western France, belonging to the department of Vendée, and protecting the Bay of Bourgneuf

on the south-west. Pop. (1906) 8388. The area amounts to

22 sq. m., one-sixth dunes. Between the island and the mainland

is a sandbank laid bare at low water, and crossed by an embankment

and carriage road some 2% m. long. It was not till about

1766 that it was found possible to walk across to the island,

which lies from N.N.W. to S.S.E., and is 12 m. long, its breadth

varying from 1 m. in the south part to 3 or 4 m. in the north.

It appears to be formed of alluvial deposits gradually accumulated

round a rock of no great size situated at the meeting-place

of the Gascony and Brittany currents. Fishing, agriculture,

oyster-breeding and work in the salt marshes also occupy the

inhabitants. There are two communes, Noirmoutier and

Barbatre. Noirmoutier, which has a small port, has about

2165 of its 6644 inhabitants gathered together in a little town

with narrow and winding streets. Its castle was once the residence

of the abbot of Her. In the church (1 2th, 14th and 19th

centuries) there is a crypt of the 11th century. A mile to the

north of the town lies a pleasant watering-place, rendered

picturesque by the La Chaise woods (evergreen oaks and pines),

and a grand confusion of rocks, among which lie charming

beaches. A dolmen, several menhirs, and the ruins of a Gallo-Roman

villa with its hot baths show that the island must have

been occupied at an early date; but the first fact in its recorded

history is the foundation of the Benedictine monastery of Her

by St Philibert about 680. From this monastery the name

Noirmoutier (H eri manasterium, H ermoutier) is derived. It had

already attained to great prosperity when it was pillaged by the

Normans in 825 and 843. In 1205 the abbey of Notre Dame la

Blanche was built at the north extremity of the island to take

the place of a Cistercian convent established in the Ile du Pilier,

at that time attached to Noirmoutier by a dike. This abbey was

ruined by the Protestants in 1562. In the 15th, 16th and 17th

centuries the island belonged to the family of La Tremoille, and

in 16 50 the territory was made a duchy. In 1676 the island was

captured by the Dutch. Having been seized by Charette during

the war of Vendée, it was recovered by the Republican general,

Haxo, who caused the Vendean leader, d'Elbée, to be shot.

<section end="s5"/>

<section begin="s6"/>'''NOISE''' (a word of doubtful origin; O. Fr. nogse or nose; Prov. nausa, which points to Lat. nausea, sickness, as the origin; others take Lat. noxia, harm, as the source), an excessive, offensive, persistent or startling sound. By the common law of England freedom from noise is essential to the full enjoyment of a dwelling house, and acts which affect that enjoyment may be actionable as nuisances. But it has been laid down that a nuisance by noise, supposing malice to be out of the question,

is emphatically a question of degree (Gaunt v. Finney, 1872, 8 Ch. Ap. 8). The noise must be exceptional and unreasonable. The ringing of bells, building operations, vibration of machinery,

fireworks, bands, a circus, merry-go-rounds, collecting disorderly

crowds, dancing, singing, &c., have been held under certain

circumstances to constitute nuisances so as to interfere with

quiet and comfort, and have been restrained by injunction.

Noise occasioned by the frequent repetition of street cries is

frequently the subject of local by-laws, which impose penalties

for infringement.

<section end="s6"/>

<section begin="s7"/>'''NOISOME''', harmful, offensive, especially of that which causes physical disgust. The word is formed from the obsolete “ noy, ”

trouble, a shortened form of “ annoy, ” now only used as a verb,

to cause trouble, the usual substantive being “ annoyance.”

The O. Fr. anai, anui (modern ennui) is an adaptation of Lat.

in odio esse, venire or habere, to be sick, tired of anything (odium,

disgust, hatred). The word has no connexion with Lat. nocere,

to hurt.

<section end="s7"/>

<section begin="s8"/>'''NOKES''' (NOKE, NOAK, NOAKES), JAMES (d. 1692), an English actor, whose laughter-arousing genius is attested' by Cibber and

other contemporaries. Sir Martin Mar-all, Sir Davy Dunce

and Sir Credulous Easy were among his favourite parts. His

success as the Nurse in Nevil Payne's Fatal Jealousy was so

great that he was thereafter nicknamed “ Nurse Nokes.”

<section end="s8"/>

<section begin="s9"/>'''NOLA,''' a city and episcopal see of Campania, Italy, in the province of Caserta, pleasantly situated in the plain between Mount Vesuvius and the Apennines, 16% m. E.N.E. of Naples, 121 ft. above sea-level. Pop. (1901) 11,927 (town); 14,511

(commune). It is served by the local railway from Naples to

Baiano, and is 22 m. from Naples by the main line via Cancello.

The more conspicuous buildings are the ancient Gothic cathedral

(restored in 1866, and again in 1870 after the interior was

destroyed by fire), with its lofty tower, the cavalry barracks,

the ex-convent of the Capuchins at a little distance from the

city, and the seminary in which are preserved the famous

Oscan inscription known as the Cippus Abellanus (from Abella,

the modern Avella, q.~v.)' and some Latin inscriptions relating

to a treaty with Nola regarding a joint temple of Hercules.

Two fairs are held in Nola, on the 14th of June and the 12th

of November; and the 26th of July is devoted to a great festival

in honour of St Paulinus, one of the early bishops of the city, who invented the church bell (campana, taking its name from Campania). The church erected by him in honour of St Felix in the 4th century is extant in part. There is a monument (restored in 1887) to Giordano Bruno, the free-thinker, who was born at Nola in 1548.

Nola (N&»}a) was one of the oldest cities of Campania, variously said to have been founded by the Ausones, the Chalcidians and the Etruscans. The last-named were certainly in Nola about 500 B.c. At the time when it sent assistance to Neapolis against the Roman invasion (3 28 B.c.) it was probably occupied by Oscans in alliance with the Samnites. The Romans made themselves masters of Nola in 313 B.c., and it was thenceforth faithful to Rome. In the Second Punic War it thrice bade defiance to Hannibal; but in the Social War it was betrayed into the hands of the Samnites, who kept possession till, Marius, with whom they had sided, was defeated by Sulla, who in 8o B.c. subjected it with the rest of Samnium. Seven years later it was stormed by Spartacus. Whatever punishment Sulla may have inflicted, Nola, though it lost much of its importance, remained a<section end="s9"/><noinclude><references/></div></noinclude>

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