Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 14.djvu/718
694 L I S L I S
Among the bishops of Lisieux may be mentioned Nicholas Oresme, who died in 1382, and Pierre Cauchon, the judge of Joan of Arc, who occupied this see after he had been driven from that of Beauvais.
LISKEARD, anciently Liscarret, a market-town and
municipal and parliamentary borough in the county of
Cornwall, England, is picturesquely situated, partly in a
hollow and partly on a rocky eminence, 12 miles east of
Bodmin, and 265 west-south-west of London by rail. The
church of St Martin, in the Perpendicular style, with a tower
of earlier date which possesses a Norman arch, is the largest
ecclesiastical building in the county, except the church of
Bodmin. A town-hall in the Italian style was erected in
1859. A grammar school was founded at a very early period,
and there are several other schools and charities. There are
manufactures of leather, but the prosperity of the town is
dependent chiefly on agriculture, and the neighbouring
tin, lead, and copper mines. Liskeard returns one member
to parliament. It received its first charter in 1240, from
Richard, earl of Cornwall, brother of Henry III., but its
principal charter in 1586, from Queen Elizabeth. The
population of the municipal borough (area 810 acres)
in 1871 was 4700, and in 1881 it was 4479, that of the
parliamentary borough (area 8387 acres) in the same years
being 6576 and 5591.
LISLE, Joseph Nicolas de (1688-1768), astronomer, was born at Paris on April 4, 1688, and was educated at the Collége Mazarin. His devotion to astronomy dates from 1706, in which year he carefully observed an eclipse of the sun. In 1714 he was admitted to the Academy of Sciences, and in 1720 he made the proposals for determin ing the figure of the earth, which were carried out under the auspices of that body some years afterwards. In 1724 De Lisle visited England, where, through Newton and Halley, he was received into the Royal Society, and in 1726 he accepted an invitation from Catherine I. to the chair of astronomy in the Imperial Academy of Sciences at St Petersburg. In 1747 he returned to Paris, and was allowed a very imperfect observatory in the Hôtel Cluny, where Messier and Lalande were among his pupils. In 1753, previous to the transit of Mercury, he published a map of the world representing the effect of that planet's parallaxes in different countries, and in 1754 he was made geographical astronomer to the naval department. In 1762 he resigned in favour of Lalande, and withdrew to the abbey of Sainte Geneviève, where he died of apoplexy on September 11, 1768.
Besides numerous papers contributed to the Transactions of the Academies of Paris, Berlin, and St Petersburg, he wrote Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire et aux progrès de l'Astronomie, de la Géographie, et de la Physique (St Petersburg, 1738), Eclipses circumjovialium, ad annos 1734, 1738, et menses priores 1739 (Berlin, 1734), and Mémoire sur les nouvelles decouvertes au nord de la mer du Sud (Paris, 1752-53). See ASTRONOMY, vol. ii. p. 757.
LISMORE, an island of 9600 acres, about 10 miles long and averaging 1½ miles broad, with a population in 1881 of 630, lying south-west and north-east at the entrance of the Linnhe Loch in Argyllshire, Scotland. The name means the great enclosure (whether "garden," as the Scotch, or "fort," as the Irish authorities suppose, is uncertain), and occurs in Ireland in the Waterford Lismore and ten other places. "Lis" is one of the most frequent words in compound Irish names, there being one thousand four hundred townlands or villages which begin with it. A Columban monastery was founded there by St Moluag about 592 (Reeves, Adamnan, p. 34), whose bell is perhaps that found in 1814 at Kilmichael Glassary,[1] and whose crozier or staff is in the possession of the duke of Argyll.[2] About 1200 the see of Argyll was separated from Dunkeld by Bishop John "the Englishman," and Lismore soon after became the seat of the bishop of Argyll, some times called "Episcopus Lismoriensis" (Skene, Celtic Scotland, ii. p. 408 sq.), quite distinct from the bishop of the Isles (Sudreys and Isle of Man), called "Episcopus Sodoriensis" or "Insularum," whose see was divided into the English bishopric of Sodor and Man and the Scottish bishopric of the Isles in the 14th century (Keith's Catalogue, p. 173). The monastic establishment of Lismore, at one time consisting of Culdees (Reeves, Culdees, p. 49), was converted into a chapter of canons regular and a dean, whose right to elect the bishop was recognized as early as 1249 (Baluze, Miscel., vii. p. 442; Orig. Paroch. Scot., ii. pt. 1, p. 161).
Lismore has an accidental celebrity from the Book of the Dean of
Lismore, a MS. collection of poems, Gaelic and English, made by
James M'Gregor, vicar of Fortingall and dean of Lismore (1514-51).
A selection of the Gaelic poems, with translations by Rev. T.
M Lauchlan, and introduction by Mr W. F. Skene, published 1862, is
of value both for the language and the contents. The language is the
Gaelic of the West Highlands, spelt phonetically, as spoken in the
beginning of the 16th century, and its variations from ancient Irish
on the one hand and modern Gaelic on the other are of much interest
to Celtic scholars. Its contents are Ossianic fragments, some of
Irish, others of Scotch origin, and a few more recent Gaelic verses.
The publication of this work, and J. F. Campbell of Islay's collection
from oral sources of the existing traditional Gaelic poetry, have for
the first time given a genuine historical solution of the Ossianic
problem (see OSSIAN). There are remains of three castles on
Lismore : at Tireforr a fort of two concentric circles of dry stones,
supposed to be Norse or Danish; at Achindown a square keep with
walls 40 feet high, believed to be the palace of the bishop; and on
the west side of the island Castle Corffin, mentioned in a grant to
Campbell of Glenurqhay in 1470 (Orig. Par. Sc., ii. p. 109).
LISMORE, a market-town and seat of a diocese, partly
in Cork but chiefly in Waterford, Ireland, is beautifully
situated on a steep eminence rising abruptly from the
Blackwater, 40 miles west-south-west of Waterford. At
the verge of the rock on the western side is the old baronial
castle, erected by King John in 1185, which was the
residence of the bishops till the 16th century. It was
besieged in 1641 and 1643, and in 1645 it was partly
destroyed by fire. To the east, on the summit of the
height, is the cathedral of St Carthagh, erected in 1663 by
the earl of Cork, in the Later English style, with a square
tower surmounted by a tapering spire. There are a
grammar school, a free school, and a number of charities.
Some trade is carried on by means of the river, and there
is a salmon fishery. The population of the town in 1871
was 1946.
The original name of Lismore was Maghsciath. Its present name
was derived from a monastery, founded by St Carthagh in 633,
which became so celebrated as a seat of learning that it is said
no less than twenty churches were erected in its vicinity. In
the 9th and beginning of the 10th centuries the town was repeat
edly plundered by the Danes, and in 978 the town and abbey were
burned by the Ossorians. Henry II., after landing at "VVaterford,
received in Lismore castle the allegiance of the archbishops and
bishops of Ireland. In 1518 the manor was granted to Sir Walter
Raleigh, from whom it passed to Sir Richard Boyle, afterwards earl
of Cork. From the earls of Cork it descended by marriage to the
dukes of Devonshire. It was incorporated as a municipal borough
in the time of Charles L, when it also received the privilege of re
turning members to parliament, but at the Union it was disfranch
ised, and also ceased to exercise its municipal functions. Lismore is
the birthplace of Robert Boyle, but its claim to be the birthplace
of Congreve does not rest on a sufficient foundation.
LISSA (in Polish, Leszna), a manufacturing town in the circle of Fraustadt, district of Posen, Prussia, is situated on the Breslau and Posen Railway, near the frontier of Silesia. The most prominent buildings are the handsome château, the mediæval town-house, the three churches, and the synagogue. Its manufactures consist chiefly of cloth, liqueurs, tobacco, and wax; it also