Everything about River Loire totally explained
The
Loire River (in
French), the longest
river in
France with a length of 1020 km, drains an area of
117,000 km², more than a fifth of France. The central part of the
Loire Valley was added to the
World Heritage Sites list of
UNESCO on
December 2,
2000.
Origin of the name
The name "Loire" comes from
Latin Liger, which is itself a transcription of the native
Gaulish (
Celtic) name of the river. The Gaulish name comes from the Gaulish word
liga, which means "silt, sediment, deposit, alluvium", a word that gave
French lie, which in turn gave
English lees.
Liga comes from the
Proto-Indo-European root *
legh-, meaning "to lie, lay", which gave many words in English, such as to lie, to lay, ledge, law, etc.
In French the adjective derived from the river is
ligérien, as in
le climat ligérien ("the climate of the Loire Valley"), a climate considered the most pleasant of northern France, with warmer winters and, more generally, fewer extremes in temperatures than more than 38 degrees Celsius.
Origins of the river
Studies of the paleogeography of the region suggest that in the
Pleistocene the paleo-Loire continued its northward flow and joined the
Seine, while the lower Loire found its source upstream of
Orléans in the region of
Gien, flowing westward along the present course. At a certain point during the long history of uplift in the
Paris Basin, the lower, Atlantic Loire captured the "paleo-Loire" or
Loire séquanaise ("Loire-Seine"), producing the present river. The former bed of the
Loire séquanaise is occupied by the
Loing.
Geography
Originating in
Ardèche, in springs on
Mont Gerbier de Jonc in the north-eastern part of the southern
Cévennes highlands, the Loire flows roughly northward through
Roanne and
Nevers to
Orléans and thereafter westward through
Tours to the
Atlantic at
Nantes, where it forms an
estuary. Changes in the river's water levels have sometimes resulted in serious flooding, notably in
1856,
1866 and
1911.
Unlike most other rivers in western Europe, there are very few
dams or locks creating obstacles to its natural flow. The Villerest dam, built in 1985 a few kilometers south of
Roanne, has played a key-role in preventing recent flooding. As a result, the Loire is a very popular river for boating excursions, flowing through a pastoral countryside, past limestone cliffs and
historic castles.
Navigation
For over 2,000 years, the Loire was one of the great highways of France, but the coming of the railway in the 19th century caused a collapse in the river's commercial navigation. Today the river is only regarded as navigable as far as Bouchemaine, where the
Maine joins it near
Angers.
The
Phoenicians and
Greeks had used packhorses to transport goods from Lyon to the Loire to get from the Mediterranean basin to the Atlantic coast. The
Romans used the Loire as far as
Roanne, only around 150km from the source, whilst the
Vikings used longships to attack
Tours.
River traffic increased until the 19th century, with a toll system being used in medieval times. For centuries attempts were made to keep a navigable channel open by the use of wooden embankments and dredging. During the 17th century,
Jean-Baptiste Colbert instituted stone retaining walls and quays from Roanne to
Nantes which helped make the river more reliable, but navigation was frequently stopped by flood and drought. In 1707 floods were said to have drowned 50,000 people, with the water rising more than 3m in two hours in
Orléans. A typical passenger timetable from Orléans to Nantes took eight days, with the upstream journey against the flow taking fourteen.
Steam-driven passenger boats appeared soon after the beginning of the 19th century plying the river between Nantes and Orléans; by 1843, 70,000 passengers were being carried annually in the lower river. However with the introduction of the railway in the 1840s trade on the river steadily declined and proposals to build a fully navigable river up to
Briare came to nothing. The opening of the
Canal latéral à la Loire in
1838 enabled navigation between Digoin and Briare to continue, but the river level crossing at Briare remained a problem until the construction of the
Briare aqueduct in
1896.
The
Canal de Roanne à Digoin was also opened in 1838 and was nearly closed in
1971 but still provides navigation further up the Loire valley to Digoin. However the 261km
Canal de Berry, a narrow canal with locks only 2.7m wide, which was opened in 1820s and connected the Canal latéral à la Loire at
Marseilles-lès-Aubigny to the
Cher River at
Noyers and back into the Loire near Tours, was closed in
1955.
Tributaries
Départements and towns
Several
départements of France were named after the Loire. The Loire flows through the following départements and towns:
Ardèche
Haute-Loire: Le Puy-en-Velay
Loire: Feurs, Roanne
Saône-et-Loire: Digoin
Allier
Nièvre: Nevers
Cher: Sancerre
Loiret: Briare, Gien, Orléans
Loir-et-Cher: Blois
Indre-et-Loire: Amboise, Tours
Maine-et-Loire: Saumur
Loire-Atlantique: Ancenis, Nantes, Saint-NazaireFurther Information
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