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Nantes

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Nantes
Location of
Map
CountryFrance
Government
 • MayorJean-Marc Ayrault (PS)
Population
280,600
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code

Nantes (Template:Lang-br: Gallo: Naunnt) is a city in western France, near the Atlantic coast, with 711,120 inhabitants in its metropolitan area at the 1999 census. Nantes is the capital of the Pays de la Loire région, as well as the prefecture of the Loire-Atlantique departement. It is also the most important city of the historic province of Brittany, though now a part of the current Pays de la Loire administrative region. Nantes is a green city, and is also known, according to its citizens and a French magazine Le Point, as the most pleasurable and peaceful city to live in France.


History

Originally founded as a town by the Celtic tribe named Namneti around 70 BC, it was conquered by Julius Caesar in 56 BC and named Portus Namnetus. Christianised in the 3rd century AD, Nantes was successively invaded by the Saxons (around 285), the Franks (around 500), the Britons (in the 6th and 7th centuries) and the Normans (in 843). In 937, Alain Barbe-Torte, grandson of the last king of Brittany who was expelled by Norris, drove them out and founded the duchy of Brittany.

When the duchy of Brittany was annexed by the kingdom of France in 1532, Nantes kept the parliament of Brittany for a few years, before it was moved to Rennes. In 1598, King Henry IV of France signed the Edict of Nantes here, which granted Protestants rights to their religion.

During the 18th century, prior to abolition of slavery, Nantes was the slave trade capital of France. This kind of trade led Nantes to become the first port in France and a wealthy city. When the French Revolution broke out, Nantes chose to be part of it, although the whole surrounding region soon degenerated into an open civil war against the new republic. The excesses of the revolution led to thousands of summary executions, mainly by drowning in the Loire River. In the 19th century, Nantes became an industrial city. The first public transport anywhere may have been the omnibus service initiated in Nantes in 1826. It was soon imitated in Paris, London and New York. The first railroads were built in 1851 and many industries were created.

In 1940, the city was occupied by German troops. In 1941, the murder of a German officer, Lt. Col.Fritz Hotz, caused the retaliatory execution of 48 civilians.[citation needed] In 1943, the city was bombed twice by British bombers. Nantes was freed by the Americans in 1944.

In recent years the city's harbour was moved to the very mouth of the Loire river, at Saint-Nazaire, and since then the city has moved to a more modern, service based, economy.[citation needed]

Politics and administration

This section includes information translated from this Wikipedia article « fr:Nantes », specifically from this version.

Mayor of Nantes

The current mayor of Nantes is Jean-Marc Ayrault (PS), first elected in 1989 and now serving a third term, until 2008.

Neighbourhoods

Since 1995, Nantes has been divided into 11 neighbourhoods. Each of these neighbourhoods are controlled by a Comité consultatif (Consultative committee), comprising directly elected officials and a team of municipal members, similar to a New England board of selectmen. These neighbourhoods are:

Metropolitan area

The Nantes metropolitan area (Nantes Métropole) is the intercommunal structure connecting the city of Nantes with nearby suburbs. It had a 1999 population of 554,478, 48.7% of which comprised the city of Nantes.

Region and département

Nantes is the préfecture (capital city) of both the Loire-Atlantique département and the Pays de la Loire région.

Nantes and Brittany

The city of Nantes was formerly part of the historic province of Brittany and its former capital.

Historically, the country around Nantes (Template:Lang-fr; Template:Lang-br; Gallo: Paeï de Nàntt) was always seen as being part of Brittany. In 1207, the dukes of Brittany made Nantes their home, building the Château des ducs de Bretagne on the banks of the river Loire. Most of the dukes and duchesses were buried in either the castle or the nearby abbey.

In 1789, the separation of the historical provinces of France resulted in Brittany being split in five: the lower of the five, Loire-Inférieure (today Loire-Atlantique) was where Nantes was situated.

Successive regional regroupments during the 20th century resulted in Loire-Atlantique being split from the other four departements by the Vichy regime in 1941. A new région was created centred on Nantes, the Pays de la Loire. Much debate surrounding this move persists while those in favour cite economical interests, those against argue from a cultural and historical point of view.

The issue of linguistics is also relevant. In the east part of Brittany (variously called Bretagne Gallèse or Haute Bretagne) the French language and its derivatives, such as Gallo, have long had more influence than Breton. However, in many large cities, including Nantes and Saint-Brieuc, the Breton language has always been spoken more widely (even though in Le Pays Nantais the opposite was true). In recent years, many bilingual plaques have appeared on tourist attractions in the city, with the help of the Office de la Langue Bretonne.

Leisure and sights

The courtyard of the Château des ducs de Bretagne

Castles and churches

Museums

  • Musée d'histoire de Nantes (inside the Château des ducs de Bretagne)
  • Musée des Beaux arts de Nantes (Fine arts museum of Nantes)
  • Musée Thomas Dobree (Thomas Dobree archaeological museum)
  • Museum d'histoire naturelle (Natural History museum)
  • Musée Jules Verne (Jules Verne museum)
  • Musée de l'imprimerie (museum of printing)
  • Musée naval Maille Breze (naval museum)
  • Musée de la machine à coudre (sewing machine museum)
  • Musée des sapeurs pompiers du Pays de la Loire: the firemen museum of the Pays de la Loire
  • Musée des compagnons du devoir, also Manoir de la Hautiere: an exhibition of masterpieces crafted by journeymen
  • The Pays de la Loire regional contemporary art collection
  • The Planetarium

Historical places

Parks and gardens

  • Jardin des plantes de Nantes (botanical gardens of Nantes)
  • Ile de Versailles (Versailles Island): Japanese gardens.
  • Parc de Proce (Proce park)
  • Parc du Grand Blottereau (Grand Blottereau park)
  • Parc de la Chantrerie (Chanterie park)
  • Parc de la Beaujoire (Beaujoire park)
  • Parc de la Gaudiniere (Gaudiniere park)
  • Le cimetière paysager (the landscape cemetery)
  • Le jardin des cinq sens (the five senses garden)
  • Vallée de l'Edre (Erdre valley)
  • Prairie aux Ducs

Concert halls

  • Nantes Zénith (concert hall): France's largest and newest Zenith, which can hold up to 8500 people
  • Theatre Graslin (Graslin Theatre): Nantes' historical theatre.
  • Pannonica
  • Lieu Unique: located in what once was the LU biscuit factory.
  • Olympique: Built in an old cinema in 1927.
  • Carrière: located in the borough of Saint-Herblain.
  • Trocardière: located in the borough of Rezé.
  • Onyx: Located in the Atlantis commercial zone, designed by Jean Nouvel.
  • Cité Des Congrès
  • Theatre Terrain Neutre
  • Bouche D'Air
  • University Theatre

Cinemas

  • Gaumont Nantes: central, located at the Place du Commerce in the very heart of the city, reknowned as the first cinema of Nantes.
  • UGC Atlantis: located in the borough of Saint-Herblain, in the Atlantis commercial zone.
  • Pathé Atlantis: also located in the borough of Saint-Herblain, in the Atlantis commercial zone.
  • Cinématographe: specialising in arthouse movies.

Media

Local television channels

  • Nantes 7 (local news)
  • Télé Nantes (entertainment channel about the city)
  • France 3 Ouest (local news)

Radio

  • NRJ (pop rock)
  • Fun Radio (dance and soul)
  • Le Mouv' (rock)
  • Hit West (pop rock)
  • FIP (public broadcasting)
  • Alternantes
  • France Bleu Loire Ocean (public broading)
  • Jet FM
  • Prun' (student radio)
  • Sun FM
  • NTI
  • Radio Classic

Newspapers

Free:

  • La lettre A Lulu
  • Le mois Nantais
  • Métro
  • 20 Minutes
  • Nantes Attitude
  • Nantes Passion
  • Pil
  • Pulsomatic
  • People Nantes
  • INSITU Nantes

For sale:

  • Le Journal Des Entreprise
  • Nantes Poche
  • Nouvel Ouest
  • Ouest France
  • Presse Ocean
  • L'éclair

Geography

Nantes is located on the banks of the Loire river, at the confluence of the Erdre and the Sèvre Nantaise, and near the river's mouth, 55 km (35 mi) from the Atlantic Ocean. The city was built in a place where many branches of the Loire river created several islands, but most of those branches were filled in at the beginning of the 20th century (and the confluence with the Erdre river diverted and covered) due to the increasing car traffic.

Demographics

As of the 1999 census, there were 270,251 inhabitants in the commune of Nantes. The population density was 4260 persons/km². There were 711,120 inhabitants in the metropolitan area.[citation needed]

As of February 2004 estimates, the population of the city of Nantes has reached 276,200 inhabitants.[citation needed]

Climate

About 50 kilometers away from the coast, Nantes has generally cool winters and mild summers, with rainfalls at least every week, which makes Nantes a temperate city, though winters can be freezy and summers hot, especially during the month of July.

Miscellaneous

The Cathedral of Nantes

Formerly the capital of Brittany, Nantes was separated from the region by the Vichy government in June 1941. Although the city has been part of the Pays de la Loire région since 1971, the feeling that Nantes belongs to Brittany is still solid nowadays. For cultural and political reasons, many people still identify with Brittany.

The local football team is FC Nantes Atlantique. For the 2007 Rugby World Cup in France, Nantes will play host to a number of matches including England against Samoa and Wales against Fiji.

The Celtic band Tri Yann was originally known as Tri Yann an Naoned (the three Johns from Nantes).

On December 31, 2006, some 600 people gathered in Nantes to protest the arrival of the New Year. They marched and held up banners that read "No to 2007" and "Now is better!" The protesters asked several governments and even the UN to declare a moratorium on the future. When the clock ticked past midnight, indicating the arrival of 2007, the protesters happily began to cheer "No to 2008!" The organisers claimed that they would stage the same event at the end of 2007, but this time on the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris.[1]

Colleges and universities

  • Ecole Centrale de Nantes
  • Audencia Nantes: school of management.
  • Ecole Polytechnique de l'Université de Nantes
  • Ecole des Mines de Nantes
  • Université de Nantes: created in 1460, moved to Rennes in 1735, only to be reopened in 1962.
  • Ecole d'Architecture de Nantes
  • Ecole Nationale d'Ingénieurs des Techniques des Industries Agricoles et Alimentaires
  • Ecole Supérieure du Bois
  • Ecole de design Nantes Atlantique
  • Ecole Nationale Vétérinaire de Nantes: one of four national schools of veterinary in France.

Transport

Public transport

The omnibus, the first organized public transit system within a city, appears to have been originated in Nantes in 1826 with the tramway beginning operation in 1879. This tramway system closed in 1958 until tramways made a comeback. There has been a question about whether to build a tramway or a subway system for Nantes, but it appears that the population opted for a tramway. The first tramway line was opened in 1985, now the largest tramway network in France. Future line extensions are projected.

Nantes public transportation (TAN for transport de l'agglomeration Nantaise in French) has three tramway lines, one busway line, hundreds of bus lines, two navibus lines and four suburbian train lines. The system works efficiently with moderate ticket rates, rare delays, constant informations about the network and clean transports. TAN renewed its fleet of buses as well as the tramways and the brand new busway, in way to help to protect the environment with natural gas powered buses, and low deck for tramways, busways, buses and navibus for full accessibility to disabled people for the whole network.

The tramway of Nantes
  • Ligne 1 (Tramway)
  • Ligne 2 (Tramway)
  • Ligne 3 (Tramway)
  • Ligne 4 (Busway)
  • Hundred of bus lines
  • Two Navibus lines
  • Four suburbian train lines

Projects on the network:

  • Extension of the line 1
  • Extension of the line 3
  • Connection between the tramway lines 1 and 2
  • Nantes is the first European city to have created a busway launched in November 2006 : the Ligne 4.

Suburban Trains

TAN has made an agreement with local trains TER to allow people wishing to go in suburbian areas to use the trains, within the city limits, with a TAN ticket. There are four lines linking major suburban areas of the city.

National Trains

Nantes lies on a number of rail lines, including several TGV lines. Nantes is connected via TGV to Paris, Lyon, Marseille, Lille, and Strasbourg. By Corail (classical train), Nantes is connected to Quimper, La Rochelle, Bordeaux, Lyon, and Toulouse. Transport express régional (TER, regional transport) links to Saint-Nazaire, Angers, Le Mans, La Roche sur Yon, and many other regional cities.

Airports

Nantes Atlantique Airport, located to the south west, serves the city and surrounding areas, with daily flights linking main French airports as well as several European cities and further destinations.

Template:Future infrastructure The construction of a new airport is soon expected to begin at Notre Dame Des Landes, and will eventually become the main airport of western France, and the second main French airport.

Famous people born in Nantes

Twinnings

Nantes has town twinning agreements with several cities:

See also

References

  1. ^ French marchers say 'non' to 2007 BBC News, 1 January 2007. Retrieved on 12 February 2007.

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