- Source: Cabourg
Cabourg (French pronunciation: [kabuʁ] ; Norman: Cabouorg) is a commune in the Calvados department, region of Normandy, France. Cabourg is on the coast of the English Channel, at the mouth of the river Dives. The back country is a plain, favourable to the culture of cereal. The town sits on the Côte Fleurie (Flowery Coast) and its population increases by over 40,000 during the summer.
Geography
Cabourg is located on the north of France between Caen and Deauville, part of the Côte Fleurie. The town is on the Dives river, across from Dives-sur-Mer.
On 1 January 2017, the town was transferred from the Arrondissement of Caen to that of Lisieux.
= Climate
=Cabourg has an Oceanic climate with mild summers and cool winters. The proximity of the sea limits large variations in temperature and creates winters without much frost and summers without excessive heat. Wind is frequent especially on the beach.
History
It was from Cabourg that William the Conqueror drove the troops of Henry I of France back into the sea in 1058.
According to Marcel Proust's biographer George D. Painter:
But the modern Cabourg began in 1853 with the arrival of two Paris financiers in search of a new site for a luxurious watering-place. The railway age had made the Normandy coast accessible to holiday-makers; Dieppe, Trouville and Deauville to the east had already been discovered; but here the adventurers found a virgin expanse of barren dunes and level sea-sands ripe for development. By the 1880s an unreal city of villas and hotels had arisen, in a semicircle whose diameter was the seafront, whose centre was the Grand Hotel, and whose radii were traced by a fan-work of avenues shaded with limes and Normandy poplars.
Population
Cabourg contains a large amount of secondary/vacation residences. In 2020, there were 10,867 homes with 79.7% of them being classified as "Secondary residences and occasional accommodations".
Culture
Each year in June, Cabourg hosts the International Festival of the Romantic Movie.
Personalities
Cabourg is famous for being Marcel Proust's favorite vacation place at the beginning of the 20th century; it is the inspiration for Balbec, the seaside resort in Proust's In Search of Lost Time.
Jean-Pierre Andréani
Charles Bertrand (1884, Avesnes-sur-Helpe–1954)
Sandrine Bonnaire
Bruno Coquatrix (1910, Ronchin–1979)
Jean-François Dubos
Tristan Duval
Adolphe d'Ennery (1811–1899)
Jean-Louis Ezine (*1948, Cabourg)
Philippe Fourastié
Jacques Freimuller
Gilgogué
André Lenormand
Corinne Lepage
Charles-Gaston Levadé (1869–1948),
Cecil Michaelis
René-Xavier Prinet (1861, Vitry-le-François–1946)
Pierre Ucciani (1851, Ajaccio–1939)
Paul Giroud (French physician, summer residence)
International relations
Cabourg has relations with the following cities:
Atlantic City, USA
Bad Homburg, Germany
Bromont, Canada
Chur, Switzerland
Jūrmala, Latvia
Mayrhofen, Austria
Mondorf-les-Bains, Luxembourg
Oussouye, Senegal
Salcombe, United Kingdom
Spa, Belgium
Terracina, Italy
Popular culture
Cabourg is the model for Balbec, the fictional seaside town in Marcel Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu.
The Cabourg area, including the small hamlet of Varaville, is the setting for some of the events in the novel Villa Normandie (Endeavour Press, 2015) by Kevin Doherty.
References
External links
Official website (in English and French)
Cabourg website (in French)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Komune di departemen Calvados (A-L)
- Daftar komune di Calvados
- The Intouchables
- Komune di departemen Calvados (M-Z)
- Arondisemen Caen
- TER Basse Normandie
- Trois souvenirs de ma jeunesse
- Michel Delpech
- Valérie Donzelli
- Roger Dumas
- Cabourg
- SU Dives-Cabourg
- Malèna (film)
- Canton of Cabourg
- Soufiane Guerrab
- Cabourg Film Festival
- Dives-Cabourg station
- Prix de Cabourg
- The Count of Monte Cristo (2024 film)
- Cantons of the Calvados department