Home1815 Edition

HAVRE

Volume 10 · 194 words · 1815 Edition

in geography, &c. a French term signifying the fame with haven or harbour.

HAVRE de Grace, a sea-port town of France, and capital of a district of the same name, is seated in the province of Normandy, on the English channel, in a large plain at the mouth of the river Seine. It is a small fortified town, nearly of a square figure, divided into two parts by the harbour, surrounded with a wall and other works, and defended by a very strong citadel. It is one of the most important places in France, on account of its foreign trade and convenient harbour; for which reason it was made a distinct government from the rest of Normandy. It was surprised in 1562 by the Protestants, who delivered it to Queen Elizabeth; but it was lost next year. In 1694 it was bombarded by the English, and also in the year 1758. E. Long. o. 11. N. Lat. 49. 29.

HAVRE de Grace, a port town and port of entry in America, in the county of Harford, Maryland. It contains about 300 inhabitants, and lies about 65 miles south-west of Philadelphia. N. Lat. 39. 39.