Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Use dmy dates Template:Expand French Template:Infobox river

The Somme (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell, Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell;<ref>Template:Cite LPD</ref><ref>Template:Cite EPD</ref> {{#invoke:IPA|main}}) is a river in Picardy, northern France.

The river is Template:Cvt in length, from its source in the high ground of the former Template:Ill at Fonsomme near Saint-Quentin, to the Bay of the Somme, in the English Channel. It lies in the geological syncline which also forms the Solent. This gives it a fairly constant and gentle gradient where several fluvial terraces have been identified.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

NameEdit

The Somme river was known in ancient times as Samara. It presumably means 'the summery river', that is to say the 'quiet river', stemming from an adjective *sam-aro- ('summery') itself derived from the Celtic root *samo- ('summer').Template:Sfn<ref name="Falileyev">Template:Harvnb, s.v. Samara and Samarobriva Ambianorum.</ref>

The city of Amiens was also known as Samarobriva (Gaulish: 'bridge on the Samara'). It is attested by the early 1st century BC as the chief town of the Ambiani, an ancient Gallic tribe of the region.<ref name="Falileyev" /> The modern department of Somme was named after this river.

HistoryEdit

The Somme has featured prominently in several military campaigns. In 1066, the invasion fleet of William the Conqueror assembled in the Bay of the Somme, at Saint-Valery-sur-Somme. The river also featured in the 1346 withdrawal of Edward III of England's army, which forded the river at the Battle of Blanchetaque during the campaign, which culminated in the Battle of Crécy. Crossing the river also featured prominently in the campaign which led to the Battle of Agincourt in 1415.

In 1636, a Spanish army led by Thomas Francis, Prince of Carignano, crossed the Somme defeating a French army during the Thirty Years War threatening Paris.<ref name=Hanotaux>Template:Cite book</ref>

Most famously, the Battle of the Somme, during World War I, lasted from July to November 1916 and resulted in more than a million casualties. Private A. S. Bullock in his wartime memoir recalled his first sight of it in early April 1918: "... we reached a small place called Hengest sur Somme. The train stopped and we descended. There in front of us was a muddy, sluggish and somewhat narrow stream, which has given its name to one of the most awful battles in history – the Somme."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The great battles that finally stopped the German advance in the Spring Offensive of 1918 were fought around the valley of the Somme in places like Villers Bretonneux, which marked the beginning of the end of the war.

File:Sommebron1986.jpg
The source of the Somme, at Fonsommes

Départements and towns along the riverEdit

File:Mouth of the Somme.JPG
The estuary is now much smaller than it once was but still extensive.
File:Amiens StLeuAviron.jpg
The Somme at Amiens

TributariesEdit

The tributaries listed comprise:

Left tributaries:

  1. the Template:Ill,
  2. the Template:Ill,
  3. the Template:Ill,
  4. the Template:Ill,
  5. the Avre with tributaries Template:Ill and Noye,
  6. the Selle,
  7. the Template:Ill,
  8. the Template:Ill,
  9. the Template:Ill,
  10. the Template:Ill and l'Avalasse

Right tributaries:

  1. the Template:Ill,
  2. the Template:Ill,
  3. the Template:Ill,
  4. La Template:Ill,
  5. the Ancre,
  6. the Template:Ill,
  7. the Nièvre,
  8. the Template:Ill,
  9. the Template:Ill

HydrologyEdit

The river is characterized by a very gentle gradient and a steady flow. The valley is more or less steep-sided but its bottom is flat with fens and pools. These characteristics of steady flow and flooded valley bottom arise from the river's being fed by the ground water in the chalk basin in which it lies. At earlier, colder times, from the Günz to the Würm (Beestonian or Nebraskan to Devensian or Wisconsinian) the river has cut down into the Cretaceous geology to a level below the modern water table. The valley bottom has now therefore, filled with water which, in turn, has filled with fen. Template:Ill, of the source of the Somme in 1986, shows it when the water table had fallen below the surface of the chalk in which the aquifer lies. Here, the flow of water had been sufficient to keep fen from forming.

Template:Efn

One of the fens, the Marais de l'Île is a nature reserve in the town of St.Quentin. The traditional market gardens of Amiens, the Hortillonages are on this sort of land but drained. Once exploited for peat cutting, the fen is now used for fishing and shooting

In 2001, the Somme valley was affected by particularly high floods, which were in large part due to a rise in the water table of the surrounding land.

Flow-rate data (external links)Edit

Monthly flow ratesEdit

Catchment area Template:Cvt.

  • at Abbeville.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Flow rates at Hangest-sur-SommeEdit

Daily flow rates compared with mean rates for the time of year at Hangest-sur-Somme (m3/s). Catchment area Template:Cvt.<ref>1993</ref><ref>1995</ref><ref>1997</ref><ref>1998</ref><ref>1999</ref><ref>2001</ref><ref>2003</ref><ref>2005</ref>

Flow rates at PéronneEdit

Mean flow rates monthly and daily at Péronne (m3/s). Catchment area Template:Cvt.<ref>1987</ref><ref>1989</ref><ref>1991</ref><ref>1992</ref><ref>1993</ref><ref>1995</ref><ref>1996</ref><ref>1997</ref><ref>1999</ref><ref>2000</ref><ref>2001</ref><ref>2002</ref><ref>2003</ref><ref>2004</ref><ref>2005</ref>

File:Marquenterre, France.JPG
The Marquenterre bird sanctuary at the mouth of the river

Navigation and canalsEdit

The construction of the Canal de la Somme began in 1770 and reached completion in 1843. It is Template:Cvt long, beginning at St.Simon and opening into the Bay of the Somme. From St.Simon to Froissy (near Bray sur Somme, south of Albert), the canal is alongside the river. Thence to the sea, the river is partly river and partly navigation. From Abbeville, it is diverted through the silted, former estuary, to Saint-Valery-sur-Somme, where the maritime canal, once called the canal du Duc d'Angoulême enters the English Channel.

File:Lakes along the Somme.JPG
An example of the lakes formed in the fen of the valley bottom. They attract wildfowlers and anglers.

The St Quentin Canal, famous for the 1918 battle, links the Somme to northern France and Belgium and southward to the Oise. The Canal du Nord also links the Somme to the Oise, at Noyon, thence to Paris.

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

CitationsEdit

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SourcesEdit

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External linksEdit

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