Rouen
Rouen (population 110,000) is a city situated on the Seine river in Normandy, northern France.
Administration
Rouen is the préfecture (capital) of the Seine-Maritime département. It is also the capital of the Haute-Normandie region of France. Rouen is part of Agglomération de Rouen Haute-Normandie which gathers 34 towns and 391,375 inhabitants.
History
Rouen was probably founded by the Romans who called it Rotomagus. In the 5th century it became the seat of the bishopry and in the 9th century, the seat of the Duke of Normandy.
On April 16, 1203 Philippe Auguste entered Rouen and definitively annexed Normandy to the French Kingdom in 1204.
During the Hundred Years' War, on January 19, 1419, Rouen surrendered to Henry V of England who made Normandy a part of England. Joan of Arc was burned at the stake in Rouen on May 30, 1431.
Sights
Rouen is known for its Notre Dame cathedral, with its Tour de Beurre (butter tower). The cathedral was the subject of a series of paintings by Claude Monet, some of which are exhibited in the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.
Other famous structures include the Gothic Church of Saint Maclou (15th century); the Tour de Jeanne d'Arc, where Joan of Arc was imprisoned in 1430; the Church of Saint Ouen (12th-15th century); the Palais de Justice, which was once the seat of the Parlement (French court of law) of Normandy and the Museum of Fine Arts and Ceramics which contains a splendid collection of faience and porcelain for which Rouen was renown during the 16th to 18th centuries.
Miscellaneous
Rouen is served by a light metro system.
External links
- http://www.agglo-rouennaise.fr/index1.html
- http://www.mairie-rouen.fr/
- http://www.rouenflashmobs.fr.st/
Referenced By
1203 | 1418 | 1419 | 1431 | 1449 | 1562 | 1615 | 1968 student riots | 19 January | 19th January | 2002 Tour de France | 2 June | 2nd June | 30 May | 30th May | Abbey of Bec | Anne Genevieve, duchesse de Longueville | Armand Carrel | Armorica | Arthur I, Duke of Brittany | Arthur of Brittany | Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle | Bridgittines | Camille Corot | Cathedral | Cathedral architecture | Charibert | Charibert I | Charles, Duke of Burgundy | Charles the Bold | Claude Buffier | Claude Monet | Claude Oscar Monet | Cologne Cathedral | Corot | Crown glass | Crown glass process | Deck of cards | Departement | Departments of France | Duchamp | Duke of Albemarle | Dukes and Earls of Albemarle | Département | Départements | Départment | Earl of Albemarle | Edmund Waller | Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon | Edward Hyde, 1st Lord Hyde | Edward IV | Edward IV of England | Empress Maud | Etienne Charles de Loménie de Brienne | Etienne Marc Quatremère | Eugène François Vidocq | FRia | Faience | Flaubert | Fontenelle | FrancE | France/Transportation | Francois-Marie Arouet | Francois Marie Arouet | Francois Marie Arouet de Voltaire | François-Marie Voltaire | François Alexandre Frédéric, duc de la Rochefoucauld-Liancourt | François le Metel de Boisrobert | Françoise Bertaut de Motteville | French Departments | French May | French Republic | French arrondissements | French department | French départements | French railway history | Frenchman | Galswintha | Girondin | Girondins | Girondist | Gustave Flaubert | Guy de Maupasant | Guy de Maupassant | Haute-Normandie | Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville | Henry Balnaves | Henry V of England | Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick | Honore-Gabriel Riqueti Mirabeau | Honore Mirabeau | Honoré Mirabeau | Hrolf Ganger | Hundred Years' War | Hundred Years War | ISO 3166-1:FR | Jacques-Charles Dupont de l'Eure | Jacques Anquetil | Jacques Villon | January 19 ...
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