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  1. The Vienne ( French pronunciation: [vjɛn] ⓘ; Occitan: Vinhana, pronounced [viɲaˈno]) is a major river in south-western France. It is 363 km (226 mi) long. [1] It is a significant left tributary of the lower Loire. It supports numerous hydroelectric dams, and it is the main river of the northern part of the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region.

  2. Vienne River, river, western France, 217 mi (350 km) in length, a left-bank tributary of the Loire. Rising on the Plateau de Millevaches, the Vienne winds through the agricultural regions of five départements. It flows west-northwest into the Haute-Vienne département, receiving the Maulde and.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Vienne, town, Isère département, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes région, southeastern France. It lies along the Rhône River where the latter is joined by the Gère River, about 20 miles (32 km) south of Lyon. In ancient times Vienne was the capital of the Celtic tribe known as the Allobroges.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. A language, a culture, a history. A fun way to learn! Just 10 minutes a day. Find out more. Vienne, located between the Rhône River and the hills, has been occupied since earliest Antiquity and is one of France's Cities of Art and History.

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    • Temple of Augustus and Livia
    • Vienne Cathedral
    • Roman Theatre
    • Musée Gallo-Romain de Saint-Romain-en-Gal
    • Roman Circus
    • Abbaye de Saint-André-Le-Bas
    • Musée Archéologique Saint-Pierre
    • Jardin Archéologique de Cybèle
    • Jardin Du 8 Mai 1945
    • Pipet

    Along with the Maison Carrée in Nîmes, this stunning 1st-century BC temple is one of the two best examples of a Roman edifice of this kind in France. You can observe it from a railing in the centre of Vienne, on Place du Palais Charles de Gaulle, where Roman Vienna’s forum used to be. The columns, entablature and capitals are all in fine condition ...

    A French National Monument, Vienne Cathedral is not strictly a cathedral as the archdiocese of Vienne was abolished at the start of the 1800s. What you see today is mostly romanesque and gothic from between the 12th and 14th centuries, but with some later additions after the building was damaged by the Huguenots in the French Wars of Religion. The ...

    Despite being one of Roman Gaul’s biggest theatres, Vienne’s theatre remained hidden from antiquity to 1908. It was built around 40 AD and back then would have been able to seat some 13,000 spectators, making it the second largest in Gaul after the one in Autun. The theatre was restored in the 1920s and 30s and remains a performance venue, with sea...

    On the right bank of the Rhône is the Saint-Romain-en-Gal Archaeological Site. During the days of Ancient Vienna this was an enormous commercial and residential district of warehouses, villas and workshops. For anyone enamoured of ancient history it’s a bit of a playground. There are two bathing complexes, one of which was for wrestlers, and the Ro...

    Going past on Boulevard Fernand-Point you may not pay this 20-metre stone monument a second glance. But this obelisk on this quiet residential road is a very rare vestige of Vienne’s Roman Circus, where chariot races would have taken place. Dated to the 1st century, the “Pyramide de Vienne” would have been on the spina, the median line in the track...

    Founded in the 500s, not a great deal is known about this abbey apart from that it was the chapel for the palace of the Kings of Burgundy in the 900s. The abbey would have come under Benedictine control later that century, when a lot of the architecture that we can admire was completed. The bell-tower and flying buttresses date to the 1200s, while ...

    This abbey has hosted an interesting lapidary museum since 1872 and presents a mishmash of stone monuments from different eras. As you go in you’ll be greeted by a bust of the archaeologist Pierre Schneyder who donated a lot of these artefacts to the city at the start of the 1800s. There are sarcophagi, funerary altars, a frieze from the theatre, t...

    Between the Temple of Augustus and Livia and the Theatre is a public garden that is littered with fragments of Ancient Vienna. There’s a large wall, various terraces and the foundation of several houses. Best of all are the two large perpendicular archways that would have opened onto the forum, still conveying the grandeur of the city in Roman time...

    Next-door to Vienne’s tourist office is a public park on what used to be a vineyard owned by the Abbaye de Saint-Pierre, which is also just a few steps away. It was named to commemorate the Allied victory in the Second World War. But as we’re in Vienne you can be sure that there are some Ancient Roman vestiges waiting to surprise you. There’s a 4th...

    From the right bank of the Rhône you’ll be impressed by the sight of the Chapelle Notre Dame de la Salette and the statue of the Virgin beside it towering above the rest of Vienne. They sit atop Mont Pipet, the highest point of the city. In Roman times this would have been a sacred area with temples overlooking the forum, and you can still see the ...

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  6. La Vienne (en occitan limousin Vinhana) est une rivière française traversant les départements du même nom ( Haute-Vienne et Vienne) et une partie de la Creuse (2 km en rive droite seulement), de la Corrèze, de la Charente, ainsi que d' Indre-et-Loire.

  7. Loire → Atlantic Ocean. The Vienne ( Occitan: Vinhana) is one of the most important rivers in southwestern France, a main left tributary of the lower Loire river. It supports numerous hydroelectric dams . It flows through the Nouvelle-Aquitaine and Centre-Val de Loire regions, and two French départements are named after the Vienne: the Haute ...

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