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Pierrine Marie Gautier
d.9 Mar 1892 Charleston, South Carolina
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_CMTS: _OCTI: Housewife _OFNM: /Users/psu/Pictures/Pierrine Marie Gautier Soubeyroux.jpeg _SEQN: 1 _OFNM: /Users/psu/Pictures/iPhoto Library/Originals/2008/Roll 811/IMG_1757.JPG _SEQN: 2 Ille-et-Vilaine is one of the original 83 departments created during the French Revolution on March 4, 1790. It was created from part of the province of Brittany. Ille-et-Vilaine is a part of the current region of Bretagne and is bordered by the departments of Manche to the north-east, Mayenne to the west, Maine-et-Loire to the south-west, Loire-Atlantique to the south, Morbihan to the south-west, and Côtes-d'Armor to the west and north-west. Also the English Channel (locally named la Manche in French) borders the department to the north. The department is named after its two main rivers, the Ille and the Vilaine, whose confluent is in Rennes, the capital of the department and of the region; other important rivers include : * the Rance, that borders the department in the north-west and flows to the north, creating a deep fjord before reaching the English Channel on the western part of the coast (named Côte d’Émeraude) between the cities of Dinard and Saint-Malo); the Rance river is connected from the west of the department to the Ille river in the north-west suburbs of Rennes with a navigable channel (then the Ille river is channelized to join the Vilaine up to the center of the city of Rennes) ; * and the Couesnon that borders the eastern part of the department and which reaches the eastern part of the coast of the English Channel, in the flat Bay of the Mont Saint-Michel. The department is moderately elevated above the level of the sea, with many hills; however the central part has a dense network of many small rivers connecting to the Ille or the Vilaine from all around the large bassin of Rennes. The elevated hills bordering this bassin are covered by several old forests now exploited by men for the production of wood. The bassin itself is a rich agriculture area, as well as the north-west of the department near the Rance. In the extreme south of the department the flows of the Vilaine are going through slow decrease of elevation in a small corridor in the area of the city of Redon; in this area, the Vilaine is known for its frequent floods during its recent history, often because of too-intensive draining of agricultural areas around Rennes (some floods have also affected some quarters of Rennes up to the 1980s due to incorrect management of old equipment of the artificial channel of Ille-et-Rance). To avoid these hazards within inhabited cities, some natural fields bordering the Vilaine in the south of the department are now left floodable, and works for regulating the level have been done including, small artificial lakes with derivation channels, replanting trees in the basin, better management of forests, and regulating the artificial drains made for agriculture. References
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