AISLE—AIX-LA-CHAPELLE.
Royal becoming vacant, Mr A. was appointed toit by
Lord Auckland, then First Lord of the Admiralty.
If he has not made himself famous by any brilliant
discovery or important undertaking, like Herschel
or Hind, he has at least shewn his high talent by
many useful and interesting improvements, especially
in the introduction of new or more perfect scientific
instruments, more rapid methods of calculation, and
researches in magnetism, meteorology, photography,
&e. One of the most valuable of his contributions
to popular science is his well-known article on
¢ Gravitation,” in the Penny COyclopedia (1837).
Equally excellent and popular is his treatise on
Trigonometry, which was written for the Encyclo-
peedia Metropolitana (1855). He has made, besides,
numerous useful experiments in the application of
mathematical science to geognostic and astronomical
phenomena, and has deservedly obtained the reputa-
tion of being one of the most able and indefatigable
of living savans. Mr A. is a Fellow of the Royal
Society ; an Honorary Member of the Institution
of Civil Engineers, Corresponding Member of the
French Institute, and other foreign scientific bodies.
AISLE (from Lat. ala,
a wing) means any lat-
eral division of any part
of a church, whether
nave, choir, or transept.
The number of aisles
varies in the churches
of different countries.
In England, there is only
one on each side of the
nave or choir; in most
foreign countries, there
are generally two, and
at Cologne there are even
three. The continental
edifices, it would seem,
have antiquity in their
favour for this arrange-
ment (see BAsiricA). The
word i3 often incorrectly
Aisle (Melrose Abbey). applied to the open
space in the nave of
churches between the seats of the congregation.
AISNE, a tributary of the Oise, in France, rises
in the department of Meuse, and flows north-west
through the departments of Marne and Ardennes,
and then west through that of Aisne and part of
Qise, where it falls into the river Oise, above
Compitgne. Its course extends to 150 miles, of
which 70 are navigable.
AISNE, a department in the north of France,
formed of a part of ancient Picardy and the Isle of
France. It belongs to the basin of the Seine, and is
intersected by the river A., and by other navigable
streams and canals. The soil is fertile; the chief
culture is wheat, and other grain. Its rich meadows
supply Paris with hay. The area is 2830 square
miles, with a population of 555,530. It is the seat
of considerable cotton and other manufactures, the
centre of which is St Quentin (q. v.), and at St
Gobin is the fainous manufactory of mirrors. The
department is divided into 5.arrondissements and
37 cantons. The chief town is Laon (q. v.).
AIX, a town in France, formerly the capital
of Provence, now the chief town of an arron-
dissement in the department of the Bouches-du-
Rhone. It is believed to have been built by the
Roman consul, C. Sextius (120 B.c.), on account of
the mineral springs in the mneighbourhood, and
thence called Aque Sextize. A. is the seat of a
court of appeal; and possesses an academy for
theology and law, and a public library which
96
reckons nearly 100,000 vols., and 1100 MSS. The
baptistery of the cathedral is believed to have been
originally a temple of Apollo. The numerous public
fountains give a cheerful air to the place. One of
them has a sculpture of the Good King Réng, exe-
cuted by David. There is also an old clock-tower,
the machinery of which, when the clock strikes,
sets various quaint-looking figures in motion. The
industry of this again flourishing town consists
chiefly in the cultivation of the olive, in cotton-
spinning, leather-dressing, and trade in oil, wine,
almonds, &e. The warm springs are slightly sulphu-
reous, with a temperature from 90° to 100° F., clear
and transparent as the purest well-water, almost
free from smell, yet with a slightly bitter taste.
They have the reputation of improving the beauty
of the skin, and are on this account especially fre-
quented by the fair sex. The field on which Marius
defeated the Teutones lies in the plain between A.
and Arles. In the middle ages, under the Counts of
Provence (see RENE), A. was long the literary capital
of Southern Europe. The population of the muni-
cipality of Aix in 1856 was 23,346.
AIX (Aque Gratiane, Allobrogum), a small town
of Savoy, pop. 2—3000, in a delightful valley near
Lake Bourget, seven miles north from Chambery.
It was a much frequented bathing-place in the times
of the Roman empire, and among its numerous
remains of ancient times, are the arch of Pomponius,
the ruins of a temple and of a vaporarium. The
king of Sardinia has a palace here. The hot springs,
two in number, are of sulphurous quality, and of a
temperature above 100° F. They are used both for
drinking and as baths, and attract annually above
2000 visitors.
AIX-LA-CHAPELLE (Ger. Aachen) is the
capital of a districtin Rhenish Prussia. It is situated
in a fertile hollow, surrounded by heights, and
watered by the Wurm ; N. lat. 50° 47/, E. long. 6°
5"; pop. about 50,000, of whom 2000 are Protestants
and 300 Jews. A.is the centre of numerous thriving
manufactories, especially of needles and pins—
celebrated for 200 years—also of broad-cloths and
bucksking, which have almost driven even the
English goods out of the American market. As a
principal station on the Belgian-Rhenish railways,
A. is an important staple place of Prussian trade.
The city is rich in historical associations. I#
emerges from historical obscurity about the time of
Pepin, and Charlemagne founded its world-wide
celebrity. Whether it was the birthplace of Charle-
magne, is doubtful, but it became his grave 814
A.D. In 796 A.p., Charlemagne caused the alrcady
existing palace, called the Imperial Palace, to be
entirely rebuilt, as well as the chapel, in which
Pepin had celebrated Christmas in 765 A.». The
two buildings were connected by a colonnade, which
fell into ruins a short time before the emperor’s
death, probably from the effects of an earthquake.
The present town-house has been built on the ruins
of the palace ; the chapel, after being destroyed by
the Normans, was rebuilt on the ancient plan by
Otho III, in 983, and forms the nucleus of the
present cathedral. This ancient cathedral is in the
form of an octagon, which, with various additions
round it, forms, on the outside, a sixteen-sided
figure. In the middle of the octagon, a stone, witl
the inscription ¢ CAroLo MAGNoO, marks the grave of
Charlemagne. Otto III. opened the vault in the
year 997 A.p. The body of the emperor was
found in a wonderful state of preservation, seated
upon a marble chair, dressed in his robes, his sceptre
in his hand, the Gospel on his knee, a piece of the
holy cross on his head, and a pilgrim’s scrip attached
to his girdle. Otto caused the tomb to be built up
again, after repairing the injuries of the arch. In
4
1165
vaul
were
large
up «
Fred
be er
kept
time:
A.D.
newl
remo
in th
octag
style
joine
wind
kept
sever
mont
spect
Mucl
venel
magn
to d
carri¢
them
were
Th
theIn
the 1
right
times
feet v
the 1¢
partit
Grerm
Crowl
and -
with
Charl
stand
Charl
are t
Chris
pictu
beeck
by th
abode
rich i
roma;
much
ngs,
hotels
intere
ing i
public
the P
The
from
alway
which
derivi
who ¥
The 1
Palac
leges
all pe
servic
The c
ar o
midd]
in th
100,0¢
amon,
empes