French, asked by sunitaramaghav04, 6 months ago

visite en Normandie essay
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Answers

Answered by yuvrajsharma1914
0

Explanation:

Établi par la famille de Bellême au XIe siècle,le site du château et la chapelle sont des vestiges rares et significatifs du comté puis duché d'Alençon, emblématiques de notre région: il a reçu la visite du roi St louis en 1269 et devient la résidence principale de Pierre II d'Alençon qui a créé la ville close d'Essay, puis de Marguerite de Lorraine pour son douaire, enfin possession de Marguerite d'Angoulême-Alençon-Navarre, sœur de François Ier, grand'mère d'Henri IV, qui avait créé, avec son mari Charles IV d'Alençon, l'abbaye royale Sainte Madeleine d'Essay en activité jusqu'à la Révolution.

Visite libre extérieure. Visite intérieure commentée sur rendez-vous.

Protocole sanitaire :

Visite extérieure: distanciation exigée

Visite intérieure: nombre réduit et distanciation

INFOS PRATIQUES

> OUVERTURE

> TARIFS

Tarif de base - Adulte Plein tarif 1,00€ - Contribution minimum sollicitée - Visite libre des extérieurs

Gratuité jusqu’à 16 ans - Enfant accompagné

Answered by karunap520
0

Explanation:

On "D-Day" in June 1944, Allied forces disembarked on the Normandy beaches, in a massive surprise attack that was to mark the beginning of the end of the Second World War.

Thousands of Allied troops – Americans, British, French, Canadians and others, gave their lives in the battles to recapture Normandy and achieve victory over the Nazis. The Normandy beaches and the area inland are today the site of many memorials and museums in memory of those who fought through and those who died during this momentous period of history.

For more on the Normandy landings area, and a map, see Bayeux.

regions of France. In the Middle Ages, Normandy was one of the great dukedoms which, like Burgundy, rivalled in power and prestige with the kingdom of France. Indeed, the dukes of Normandy managed to achieve the same status as the kings of France, to whom they owed alliegance. Before he died, the king of England, Edward the Confessor, named his nephew William, duke of Normandy, as his successor. But after Harold, William's cousin, took the English crown for himself, William invaded England in 1066, to assert his claim to a royal crown. The story of Harold and William the Conqueror is magnificently told in the historic Bayeux Tapestry, which can be visited in Bayeux, a few miles to the west of Caen.

    With their historic links and their proximity, it is hardly surprising that the Normandy area has much in common with the south of England; the rolling countryside is not too different - fields and meadows bordered by hedges, even bluebell woods. Furthermore, the historic and vernacular styles of architecture are not too different either.

Recently reunited  as a single region, the area that was once the dukedom of Normandy was until 2015 divided into two administrative regions - Upper Normandy (Haute Normandie), capital Rouen, with its two departments, Eure (27) and Seine Maritime (76), and Lower Normandy, (Basse Normandie) capital Caen, comprising the departments of Calvados (14), Manche (50), and Orne(61).  

   Since 2016, the region of Normandy has been once again reunited, to the satisfaction of many Normans.

    To the south east, the Normandy area borders on the Ile de France, the Paris region, and towns and villages in this area have developed due to their proximity to the capital. Both Caen and Rouen are sufficiently close to Paris to benefit from the economic vigour of the Paris region, which is the most propserous in France, and from their position between two major hubs of international communications - Paris for air travel (parts of south east Normandy are less than 100 km from Charles de Gaulle airport), and the Normandy port of Le Havre, France's most important international shipping port.

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