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The Rough Guide to France PDF

1066 Pages·2013·85.818 MB·English
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THE ROUGH GUIDE to France EXPERT ADVICE • FULL COVERAGE • EASY TO USE INSIDE THIS BOOK INTRODUCTION What to see, what not to miss, itineraries and more – all you need to get started. BASICS Pre-departure tips and practical information. THE GUIDE Comprehensive, in-depth guide to the region, with area highlights and full-colour maps throughout. CONTEXTS History, art, architecture, cinema, recommended books and films, plus a useful language section. We’ve fl agged up our favourite places – a perfectly sited hotel, an atmospheric café, a special restaurant – throughout the guide with the (cid:204) symbol. France chapters UNITED KINGDOM BELGIUM Lille GERMANY ENGLISH CHANNEL 2 LUX. Le Havre5 R.Seine PA1RIS R. MaRrnee imR3. Mseuse 4Strasbourg 6 Rennes Orléans 7 Tours R. Loire Dijon AUSTRIA ATLANTIC Nantes Poitiers Bourges 8 R. Saône SWITZERLAND OCEAN La Rochelle 9 Limoges CFleerrmraonndt- Lyon 14 N BiarritzBordeaux PérigueTuoxulouse10R. Dor1do2gRRn.e. LToatrMn on1tp3eRl.l Aiellirer 15 .RhRône GreR. Dunranceob1le6 NiceMONAITCAOLY Marseille 17 11 Perpignan MEDITERRANEAN 18 ANDORRA SEA 0 100 kilometres SPAIN Ajaccio 1 Paris 7 The Loire J The Massif Central 2 The north 8 Burgundy K The Alps and Franche-Comté 3 Champagne and the Ardennes 9 Poitou-Charentes and the Atlantic coast L The Rhône valley 4 Alsace and Lorraine G The Limousin, Dordogne and the Lot M Provence 5 Normandy H The Pyrenees N The Côte d’Azur 6 Brittany I Languedoc O Corsica Make the Most of Your Time on Earth at roughguides.com This thirteenth edition published March 2013 THE ROUGH GUIDE TO France written and researched by David Abram, Nikki Bayley, Ruth Blackmore, Brian Catlos, Mary Anne Evans, Emma Gibbs, Norm Longley, John Malathronas, Keith Munro, Natalia O’Hara, Neville Walker and Greg Ward roughguides.com INTRODUCTION 3 Contents INTRODUCTION 4 Where to go 8 Things not to miss 14 When to go 12 Itineraries 24 BASICS 26 Getting there 27 Festivals 44 Getting around 31 Sports and outdoor activities 45 Accommodation 37 Shopping 49 Food and drink 39 Travel essentials 49 The media 43 THE GUIDE 58 1 Paris 58 10 The Limousin, Dordogne and the Lot 522 2 The north 152 11 The Pyrenees 580 3 Champagne and the Ardennes 198 12 Languedoc 634 4 Alsace and Lorraine 218 13 The Massif Central 678 5 Normandy 252 14 The Alps and Franche-Comté 720 6 Brittany 300 15 The Rhône valley 772 7 The Loire 356 16 Provence 802 8 Burgundy 424 17 The Côte d’Azur 860 9 Poitou-Charentes and the Atlantic coast 468 18 Corsica 930 CONTEXTS 986 History 987 Cinema 1021 Art 1005 Books 1028 Architecture 1015 French 1031 SMALL PRINT & INDEX 1042 OPPOSITE PLAGE D’ARONE, PIANA, CORSICA PREVIOUS PAGE ABBAYE DE SÉNANQUE, PROVENCE 4 INTRODUCTION Introduction to France The sheer physical diversity of France would be hard to exhaust in a lifetime of visits. Landscapes range from the fretted coasts of Brittany and the limestone hills of Provence to the canyons of the Pyrenees and the half- moon bays of Corsica, and from the lushly wooded valleys of the Dordogne and the gentle meadows of the Loire valley to the glaciated peaks of the Alps. Each region looks and feels different, has its own style of architecture, its own characteristic food and often its own dialect. Though the French word pays is the term for a whole country, people frequently refer to their own region as mon pays – my country – and this strong sense of regional identity has persisted despite centuries of centralizing governments, from Louis XIV to de Gaulle. Industrialization came relatively late to France, and for all the millions of French people that live in cities, the idea persists that theirs is a rural country. The importance of the land reverberates throughout French culture, manifesting itself in areas as diverse as regional pride in local cuisine and the state’s fierce defence of Europe’s agricultural subsidies. Perhaps the most striking feature of the French countryside is the sense of space. There are huge tracts of woodland and undeveloped land without a house in sight, and, away from the main urban centres, hundreds of towns and villages have changed only slowly and organically over the years, their old houses and streets intact, as much a part of the natural landscape as the rivers, hills and fields. Despite this image of pastoral tranquillity, France’s history is notable for its extraordinary vigour. For more than a thousand years the country has been in the vanguard of European development, and the accumulation of wealth and experience is evident everywhere in the astonishing variety of things to see, from the Dordogne’s prehistoric cave paintings and the Roman monuments of the south, to the Gothic cathedrals of the north, the châteaux of the Loire, and the cutting-edge architecture of RIGHT CHÂTEAU LAROSE TRINTAUDON, MÉDOC INTRODUCTION 5 the grands projets in Paris. This legacy of history and culture – le patrimoine – is so widely dispersed across the land that even the briefest of stays will leave you with a powerful sense of France’s past. The importance of these traditions is felt deeply by the French state, which fights to preserve and develop its national culture perhaps harder than any other country in the world, and by private companies, which also strive to maintain French traditions in arenas as diverse as haute couture, pottery and, of course, food. The fruits of these efforts are evident in the subsidized arts, notably the film industry, and in the lavishly endowed and innovative museums and galleries. From colonial history to fishing techniques, aeroplane design to textiles, and migrant shepherds to manicure, an array of impressive collections can be found across the nation. Inevitably, however, first place must go to the fabulous displays of fine art in Paris, a city which has nurtured more than its fair share of the finest creative artists of the last century and a half, both French – Monet and Matisse for example – and foreign, such as Picasso and Van Gogh. There are all kinds of pegs on which to hang a holiday in France: a city, a region, a river, a mountain range, gastronomy, cathedrals, châteaux. All that open space means there’s endless scope for outdoor activities, from walking, canoeing and cycling to skiing and sailing, but if you need more urban stimuli – clubs, shops, fashion, movies, music – then the great cities provide them in abundance. Metres UNITED KINGDOM Southampton Calais Portsmouth Boulogne 3000 Plymouth Le Touquet 2000 A16 1500 ENGLISH CHANNEL Abbeville 1000 Dieppe A28 500 Cherbourg A29 200 Le Havre 100 A13 Rouen 0 Coutances Bayeux Caen A13 R. Seine A84 A13 Roscoff Morlaix St-Malo N Brest Dinan Mont St-Michel St-Brieuc Chartres Fougères A10 Quimper Rennes Laval A11 Concarneau A81 Le Mans Orléans Carnac Vannes Angers A11 BloisA10R. Loire A85 Amboise St-Nazaire Saumur Tours A85 Nantes Chinon Loches A83 Poitiers ATLANTIC Chauvigny A20 Niort OCEAN La Rochelle A10 Limoges 170KM FROM THE CÔTE D’AZUR Saintes Angoulême Bastia Brive-la- Tulle Périgueux Gaillarde Calvi A89 Bordeaux Bergerac Souillac Corsica Arcachon A63 R. Garonne Cahors Ajaccio A62 R. Lot A20 Agen Montauban Bonifacio Toulouse A68 Bayonne Auch Biarritz San Sebastian Pau Bilbao A63 A64 Tarbes A64R. Garonne A66 Lourdes Foix SPAIN Pamplona Ax 0 100 ANDORRA kilometres Madrid Dunkerque BRUSSELS Amsterdam Bonn Berlin BELGIUM A26A25 Lille E42 Arras A2 Frankfurt AmiensA1 CaSmt-QAb26ureanitiCnharleville-Mézières LUX.LUXEMBOURGR. Moselle Mannheim E41 Berlin Beauvais A34 A6 Senlis Reims Verdun PARIA1S A4 R. Marne ChâlonAs4-sur-MarneR. Meuse A31MNeatnzcy StraA4sbourg SAt6uttgart A26 Lunéville A33 GERMANY Fontainebleau Troyes A5 Chaumont A6 A19 Sens A31 MulhCoolumsaer Auxerre Langres Belfort A36 Basel Bourges A77 A6 A38Dijon R. SaAôn3e6 Besançon Zürich A3 AUSTRIAVienna Nevers BERN SWITZERLAND A1 A12 A71 A39 A1 Lausanne Bourg-en- A9 Montluçon R. Loire MâcoA6n BreAs4s6e Annecy Geneva Chamonix A72 Lyon Clermont-Ferrand A89 A47 A43 Chambéry A4 Milan R. DordoAgnuerillac A75R. Allier SLet- PÉutiyenne ValenAce49 A48 AG41renobBleriançon Turin ITA2A1LY Genoa Gap Aubenas Rodez Millau Alès Rh .ôRne Orange Sisteron Digne A10 Albi R. Tarn Nîmes A9 Avignon A51R. Durance Grasse NiceMOMeNntAonCO Arles Aix-en-Provence Castres Montpellier A8 Cannes Fréjus A61 Carcassonne A9 BéziersSète Marseille A50 A57 St-Tropez Toulon Narbonne Hyères Perpignan MEDITERRANEAN SEA 8 INTRODUCTION FACT FILE Where to go • With a land area of 547,000 square Travelling around France is easy. kilometres, France is the largest country in the EU; its population of 66 million is second only Restaurants and hotels proliferate, many to that of Germany. of them relatively inexpensive when • compared with other developed Western France has a long secular republican tradition dating back to the revolution of European countries. Train services are 1789. Yet the majority of its population is admirably efficient, as is the road Roman Catholic – nominally, at least – and network – especially the (toll-paying) there’s a substantial Muslim minority of around 8–10 percent. autoroutes – and cyclists are much • admired and encouraged. Information is Annual GDP per capita is around $44,000, highly organized and available from making France one of the world’s richest countries, but unemployment is a persistent tourist offices across the country, as well problem, at around 10 percent. Taxes are as from specialist organizations for high, at around 43 percent, but so is social walkers, cyclists, campers and so on. spending, at almost 30 percent. As for specific destinations, Paris, of • France remains by far the most popular course, is the outstanding cultural centre, tourist destination in the world, with some 82 million visitors annually. with its impressive buildings and atmospheric backstreets, its art, nightlife • The French film industry is the world’s third and ethnic diversity, though the great most prolific, after the US and India, with around 215 million tickets sold annually. provincial cities – Lyon, Bordeaux, Toulouse, Marseille – all now vie with • France is no longer the bastion of popular the capital and each other for prestige in gastronomy it once was. Frogs’ legs, horse flesh and snails do indeed still appear on the arts, ascendancy in sport and many restaurant menus, but contrary to its innovation in attracting visitors. self-image, the country is also the second For most people, however, it’s the largest consumer of McDonalds’ burgers after the US, flipping more than a million Big Macs unique characters of the regions – and daily. not least their cuisines – that will define • a trip. Few holiday-makers stay long in A great source of confusion when meeting and greeting French people is the double kiss, the largely flat, industrial north, but or bise. When it is appropriate, and how many there are some fine cathedrals and times to do it, which cheek to start with, energetic cities to leaven the mix. The whether to touch or air kiss, what to do with your hands, or whether it’s better to shake picture is similar in Alsace-Lorraine hands instead, are all matters that vex the where Germanic influences are strong, French just as much as foreign visitors – not notably in the food. On the northern least because norms vary between regions, social situations and age groups. When in Atlantic coast, Normandy has a rich doubt, hang back, copy what everyone else heritage of cathedrals, castles, battlefields does, and go left for the first one. and beaches – and, with its cream-based • In 1910, a law was passed in France sauces, an equally rich cuisine. To the forbidding couples from kissing on train west, Brittany is more renowned for its platforms to avoid delayed departures. The Celtic links, beautiful coastline, law is still in place, though no longer enforced. prehistoric sites and seafood, while the OPPOSITE FROM TOP HOT-AIR BALLOONS, CHALON-SUR-SAÔNE; CYCLING ALONG THE CANAL DE BOURGOGNE; HAUT KOENIGSBOURG, ALSACE

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