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Troyes, town, capital of Aube département, Grand Est région, northeastern France. It is located southeast of Paris and directly south of Reims. The town was the historical capital of Champagne.

Before Julius Caesar’s conquest, Troyes was already a town of the Gauls. Under the Roman emperor Augustus, it became the capital of the Gallic tribe known as the Tricasses (hence its name). Converted to Christianity in the 3rd century, the town was threatened by the Huns in the 5th century and was defended against them by its bishop, St. Loup. Sacked by the Normans in 889, it soon came under the authority of the counts of Champagne, who founded a number of churches and almshouses there and established the great fairs which gained an international reputation and brought Troyes exceptional prosperity. The city also gave its name to the troy weight. The end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th were periods of prosperity, but in 1524 a fire destroyed 1,000 houses in Troyes. Calvinism had considerable success there, but in 1572 a great number of Protestants were put to death. Louis XIV’s revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 dispersed the town’s Protestant population and greatly damaged its industrial prosperity; incessant war and increases in taxes completed the decline of the town. It was only during the 19th century that Troyes began the development which has continued since.

Of the 25 churches which formerly existed in the town, 9 have survived. Most of these have stained glass windows, paintings, and statues, many of which belong to the early 16th-century Troyes school of sculpture. The church of Saint-Urbain in bold Gothic style was almost certainly begun in the 13th century by Pope Urban IV, who was a Troyes shoemaker’s son. In the church of Saint-Jean-au-Marché (14th–17th century) on June 2, 1420, Henry V of England married Catherine of Valois, daughter of Charles VI. The Treaty of Troyes (May 21, 1420) had just recognized Henry as heir to the throne of France. The remarkable cathedral of Saint-Pierre-et-Saint-Paul (13th–17th century) is built in a variety of Gothic styles and has about 180 magnificent stained glass panels. A 20th-century inscription at the base of the tower records that Joan of Arc, escorting Charles VII to his crowning at Reims, was feted there in solemn dignity in 1429, after receiving the surrender of Troyes. The cathedral of Saint-Remy (14th–16th century) is notable for its 197-foot- (60-metre-) tall spire. Troyes’s notable secular buildings include the 16th-century Hôtel de Vauluisant, which houses a hosiery museum displaying among its collections stockings as worn by the kings of France. The building also houses a museum of the history of the province of Champagne. Troyes Municipal Library (1651) is housed in the former abbey of Saint-Loup and has a valuable collection of old books and manuscripts.

The once famous hosiery and knitwear factories of Troyes have lost their importance. Present-day industries in Troyes include the manufacture of machine and automobile parts, but services are the dominant economic activity. Troyes has a campus of the University of Reims. Pop. (1999) 60,958; (2014 est.) 60,750.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.