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Boulogne-sur-Mer Totally Explained
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Everything about Boulogne-sur-mer totally explained » This article is on Boulogne-sur-Mer. For other places called Boulogne, see Boulogne.
Boulogne-sur-Mer ( Bonen in Dutch) is a city in northern France, in the Pas-de-Calais département of which it's a sous-préfecture. It is located by the English Channel.
Population of the city (commune) at the 1999 census was 44,859 inhabitants, whereas the whole metropolitan area ( aire urbaine) had 135,116 inhabitants.
Name
The name Boulogne was recorded for the first time during the Roman Empire as Bononia, a derivative of the Celtic word bona (meaning "foundation", "settlement", "citadel"). This derivation is also found in the name of the Italian city of Bologna.
History
Origin of the city
Originally named Gesoriacum and probably also to be identified with Portus Itius, by the 4th century Boulogne was known to the Romans as Bononia and served as the major port connecting the rest of the empire to Britain. The emperor Claudius used this town as his base for the Roman invasion of Britain, in AD 43, and until 296 it was the base of the Classis Britannica.
Middle ages
In the Middle Ages it was the centre of a namesake county. The area was fought over by the French and the English. In 1550, The Peace of Boulogne ended the war of England with Scotland and France. France bought back Boulogne for 400,000 crowns.
The Napoleonic period
In the 19th century the Cathedral of Notre Dame was reconstructed by the priest Benoit Haffreingue after he received a call from God to reconstruct the town's ruined basilica. During the Napoleonic Wars, Napoleon amassed La Grande Armée in Boulogne to invade the United Kingdom in 1805. However, his plans were halted by other European matters and the supremacy of the Royal Navy.
The two world wars
Post war to present
Economy
Boulogne-sur-Mer is the most important fishing port in France. 7,000 inhabitants derive part or all of their livelihoods from fishing.
IFREMER (the French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea) and the Pasteur Institute are located in Boulogne Port.
Certain brands, including Crown and Findus, are based in Boulogne.
Media
Miscellaneous
Open in 1991, Nausicaä - The French National Sea Centre is a Science Centre entirely dedicated to the relationship between Mankind and the Sea. Aquaria, exhibitions on the marine fauna, and the exploitation and management of marine resources (fisheries, aquaculture, coastal planning, maritime transport, exploitation of energies and mineral, tourism...). Its goal is to incite the general public to discover and to love the Sea, while raising its awareness on the need for a good management of marine resources.
In the year 1905 the First Esperanto Universal Congress was held in Boulogne-sur-Mer. L. L. Zamenhof, the creator of Esperanto, was among the attendees. In the year 2005 there was held a great anniversary meeting with more than 500 attendees.
Administration
Boulogne is the worst city of the Communauté d'agglomération du Boulonnais
Population
Transport
Road
Metropolitan bus lines are operated by TCRB
Coach lines to Calais and Dunkerque
By A16 Motorway
Rail
The main railway station is Boulogne-Ville and located in the south of the city.
Boulogne-Tintelleries is used for regional transit, located near from university and center town
Water
The ferry line between Boulogne and Dover is operated by SpeedFerries after closing of Hoverspeed.
The major port of Calais is only 30 km away and provides major connections to Dover in England.
Air
The nearest airport is Le Touquet International (30km)
Education
Boulogne sur Mer is famous for having one of the oldest summer universities for people who would like to learn French.
The University of the Opal Coast opened on Boulogne site in 1991 the main building is Saint-Louis. 6 major subjects can be studied : Languages, French Literature, Sport, Law, History and Economy.
The ULCO is situated in the town centre, at about 5 minutes from the Boulogne Tintelleries train station. Before it became the college, the site was the former St. Louis Hospital. The front entrance of the old hospital still remains as an architectural feature.
University
University : University of the Littoral Opal Coast (Saint-Louis, Grand-Rue and Capérure site)
Public primary and secondary
High Schools : Lycée Edouard Branly, Auguste Marriette, Giraux Sannier, Cazin (proffesional).
College : College Langevin, Angelier, Daunou.
Private primary and secondary
High Schools : Lycée Nazareth, Haffreingue, Saint-Joseph (proffesional).
College : College Godefroy de Bouillon, Haffreingue, Nazareth, Saint-Joseph.xc
Entertainment
There is one theatre, the Théatre Monsigny and two cinemas.
Health
Two Health centers are located in Boulogne. The public Hospital Duchenne and the private Clinique de la côte d'opale
Sports
Football
US Boulogne Côte d'Opale (Ligue 2)
Aiglons
Basketball
Stade Olympique Maritime Boulonnais (Nationale 1)
ESSM (Pro B) located in Le-Portel.
Others Sports
Aviron Boulonnais, produce many olympic medals for france
Culture
The museum of Boulogne has got the second largest egyptian collection after the Louvre in France.
La Casa San Martin is currently a museum where José de San Martin the leader of independance struggle in Argentina died in 1850, from 1930 to 1967 this house was the consulate of Argentina in France.
Nausicaä, the French national sealife center.
Food
Welsh Rarebit
Sandwich américain
Kipper
Language
Many people in Boulogne speak French with an accent influenced by the Picard language.
Born in Boulogne-sur-Mer
Matilda of Boulogne (1105-1152), countess of Boulogne and queen of England.
Frédéric Sauvage (1786-1857), engineer and inventor of the propeller,
Pierre Claude François Daunou (1761-1840), politician and historian,
Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve(1804-1869), literary critic and one of the major figures of French literary history,
Guillaume Duchenne (1806-1875), neurologist,
Henri Malo, writer and historian,
Alexandre Guilmant (1837-1911), organist/composer,
Ernest Hamy (1842-1908), Anthropologist and French ethnologist, Doctor of Medicine of the faculty of Paris, professor of anthropology and founder of the natural Natural history museum of history and first manager of the Natural history museum of Natural History, loaded with numerous scientific missions abroad; the Dr Hamy brought back his trips of the numerous and important documents. Creator in 1880 of the museum of ethnography of Trocadéro (today, Musée de l'Homme, Trocadéro, near the Eiffel Tower),
Auguste Mariette (1821-1881), scholar and archaeologist, one of the foremost Egyptologists of his generation, and the founder of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo
Benoît-Constant Coquelin (1841-1909), actor,
Ernest Alexandre Honoré Coquelin, actor,
David Early, M.B.E., (1921), famous 'radio ham' (G3DGW),
Mathieu (1921), famous painter, initiator of "lyrical abstraction" and informal art,
Sophie Daumier (born 1934), actress,
Jean-Pierre Papin (born 1963), football player,
Mickael Bourgain (born 1980), track cyclist,
Franck Ribéry (born 1983), football player.
Other famous people associated with Boulogne
Julius Caesar (100-44 BC), as a proconsul,
"Niall of the Nine Hostages" (c. 342 - c.405).
Godfrey of Bouillon (1060-1100), count of Boulogne, leader of the first crusade
Blaise de Monluc (1500-1577), marshal of France,
Henry II (1519-1559), king of France
Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), emperor,
Sir William Jenner. June 18, 1800, 2 british MDs (Woodwille and Nowel) brought in Boulogne-sur-Mer the first vaccine developped by Dr. Jenner. On June 19, the first vaccination against variola was performed on three small girls of the street des Pipots: Misses Beugny, Hédouin, and Spitalier. Boulogne could then take pride in being the first French city to spread precious antidote against this terrible illness. The government encouraged this vaccination which spread in Europe through Boulogne-sur-Mer. The memory of this first experience was illustrated on September 11th, 1865 by the unveiling of a statue of the doctor Jenner,
Napoleon III (1808-1873), emperor,
Queen Victoria (1819-1901),
José de San Martín, Argentine commander who liberated Argentina, Chile, and Peru, lived for two years and died here in 1850; he's considered one of the two most important South American Heroes (along with Simon Bolivar),
Maurice Boitel (born 1919), painter,
Constant Coquelin, actor,
Jacques-Oudart Fourmentin aka "Le Baron Bucaille", corsair,
Benoît-Agathon Haffreingue, priest and builder of Boulogne's cathedral,
Olivier Latry, organist,
John McCrae, doctor, poet, author of "In Flanders Field",
Patrick Walsh (1978), singer/songwriter
Twin towns
Boulogne-sur-Mer is twinned with:
Constanţa, Romania
Folkestone, United Kingdom
La Plata, Argentina
Zweibrücken, Germany - since 1959Further Information
Get more info on 'Boulogne-sur-mer'.
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