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Indre-et-Loire

Indre-et-Loire
Department
Prefecture building of the Indre-et-Loire department, in Tours
Prefecture building of the Indre-et-Loire department, in Tours
Flag of Indre-et-Loire
Flag
Coat of arms of Indre-et-Loire
Coat of arms
Location of Indre-et-Loire in France
Location of Indre-et-Loire in France
Coordinates: 47°15′N 0°40′E / 47.250°N 0.667°E / 47.250; 0.667Coordinates: 47°15′N 0°40′E / 47.250°N 0.667°E / 47.250; 0.667
Country France
Region Centre-Val de Loire
Prefecture Tours
Subprefectures Chinon
Loches
Government
 • President of the General Council Marisol Touraine (Socialist Party)
Area
 • Total 6,127 km2 (2,366 sq mi)
Population (2013)
 • Total 600,252
 • Rank 41st
 • Density 98/km2 (250/sq mi)
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Department number 37
Arrondissements 3
Cantons 19
Communes 277
^1 French Land Register data, which exclude estuaries, and lakes, ponds, and glaciers larger than 1 km2

Indre-et-Loire (French pronunciation: ​[ɛ̃dʁ‿e lwaʁ]) is a department in west-central France named after the Indre and the Loire rivers.

Indre-et-Loire is one of the original 83 departments created during the French Revolution on 4 March 1790. It was created from the former province of Touraine.

Tours, the departmental prefecture, was a centre of learning in the early Middle Ages, having been a key focus of Christian evangelisation since St Martin became its first bishop in c. 375. From the mid-15th century, the royal court repaired to the Loire Valley, with Tours as its capital, and at the confluence/crossing-point of the Loire and Cher rivers it became a centre of silk manufacturing and other luxury goods, including the wine-trade, creating a prosperous bourgeoisie.

After the creation of the department it remained politically conservative, as Honoré de Balzac recorded in several of his novels. Conservative Tours refused to welcome the railways which instead were obliged to route their lines by way of Saint-Pierre-des-Corps on the city's eastern edge. The moderate temper of the department's politics remained apparent after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870: sentiments remained predominantly pro-royalist during the early years of the Third Republic.

For most of the nineteenth century, Indre-et-Loire was a rural department, but pockets of heavy-duty industrialisation began to appear towards the century's end, accompanied by left-wing politics. 1920 saw the birth of the French Communist Party at the Congress of Tours. By 1920 Saint-Pierre-des-Corps had become a major railway hub and a centre of railway workshops: it had also acquired a reputation as a bastion of working class solidarity.


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