Honfleur

   

The Honfleur harbour
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The Honfleur harbour
RégionBasse-Normandie
DépartementCalvados
ArrondissementLisieux
Cantons13 commune
15,933 habitants
HabitantsHonfleurais
Population(1999)8,352 habitants
Population with double accounts(1999)8,178 habitants
Metropolitan areaCaen, 12,738
Agglomeration (2004)Communauté de
communes
15,933 habitants
Size13.67 km²


Honfleur is a harbour commune in the Norman (département of the Calvados) located on the southern bank of the estuary of the Seine, very close to the exit of the Pont de Normandie. It is especially known for its old picturesque port, characterized by its houses with slate-covered frontages, painted many times by artists, including in particular Gustave Courbet, Claude Monet and Johann Jongkind, forming the école de Honfleur which contributed to the appearance of the Impressionist movement . The Sainte-Catherine church, which has a bell-tower separate from the principal building, is the largest church made out of wood of France.

History

The first written mention attesting the existence of Honfleur emanates from Richard III, duke of Normandy, in 1027. It is also proven that in the middle of the 12th century, the city represented a significant transit point for goods from Rouen to England.

Located at the outlet of one of the principal rivers of France and in contact with the sea and supported by a relatively rich back country, Honfleur profited from a strategic position which appeared starting with the Hundred Years War. Charles V strengthened the town in order to close the estuary of the Seine to the English, with the support of the port close to Harfleur. Honfleur was however taken and occupied by the English in 1357 and from 1419 to 1450. Apart from this period, its as a basis port been used of departure for multiple French forwardings to therefore ransack the English coasts, with in particular the destruction partial of the town of Sandwich, in Kent, England, in the years 1450.

After the end of the Hundred Years War and the end of the 18th century, Honfleur underwent a boom in maritime trade, with however a disturbance at the time of the wars of religion of the 16th century. The city will take part thus in the movement of the great discoveries, with in particular the departure into 1503 of Binot Paulmierde Gonneville to the coasts of Brazil, the visit of what is now Newfoundland island and the mouth of the Saint Lawrence in 1506 by Honfleurais Jean Denis, or the departure of an expedition in 1608, directed by Samuel de Champlain, which ends to the foundation of the town of Quebec.

The old port: from this period, the trade of Honfleur thrives with the multiplication of links with Canada, the Antilles, the African coasts and the Azores, making the town one of the five principal ports for the slave trade in France. This period sees the town growing with the tearing down of part of its fortifications on the order of Colbert.

The wars of the French revolution and the First Empire, with in particular the continental blockade, cause the ruin of Honfleur, which was restored only partially during the 19th century with the revival of the trade of wood with north of Europe. This rise was however limited by the silting up of the port, which however manages to function still today.

Famous Honfleurais

Administration Honfleur is the chief town of a canton including/understanding the communes of Ablon, Barneville la Bertran, Cricquebœuf, Équemauville, Fourneville, Genneville, Gonneville sur Honfleur, Honfleur, Pennedepie, Quetteville, La Rivière-Saint Sauveur, Saint Gatien des Boisand and Theil en Auge.

These 13 communes also form the communauté de communes du Pays de Honfleur.

In 1973 Honfleur amalgamated with the commune of Vasouy (143 inhabitants in 1999, the INSEE code used to be 14725), which lays out of the statute since then of common partner.

External link

http://www.ville-honfleur.fr

fr:Honfleur

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