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Calais

Calais (UK: /ˈkæl/ KAL-ay, US: /kæˈl/ kal-AY,[3][4] traditionally /ˈkælɪs/ KAL-iss, French: [kalɛ] (listen))[5] is a port city in the Pas-de-Calais department, of which it is a subprefecture.[6] Although Calais is by far the largest city in Pas-de-Calais, the department's prefecture is its third-largest city of Arras. The population of the city proper is 72,929; that of the urban area is 149,673 (2018).[7] Calais overlooks the Strait of Dover, the narrowest point in the English Channel, which is only 34 km (21 mi) wide here, and is the closest French town to England. The White Cliffs of Dover can easily be seen on a clear day from Calais. Calais is a major port for ferries between France and England, and since 1994, the Channel Tunnel has linked nearby Coquelles to Folkestone by rail.

Calais
Calés (Picard)
Port of Calais
Location of Calais
Calais
Calais
Coordinates: 50°56′53″N 01°51′23″E / 50.94806°N 1.85639°E / 50.94806; 1.85639Coordinates: 50°56′53″N 01°51′23″E / 50.94806°N 1.85639°E / 50.94806; 1.85639
CountryFrance
RegionHauts-de-France
DepartmentPas-de-Calais
ArrondissementCalais
CantonCalais-1, 2 and 3
IntercommunalityCA Grand Calais Terres et Mers
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2026) Natacha Bouchart[1] (LR)
Area
1
33.5 km2 (12.9 sq mi)
Population
 (Jan. 2019)[2]
72,509
 • Density2,200/km2 (5,600/sq mi)
DemonymCalaisiens
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
62193 /62100
Elevation0–18 m (0–59 ft)
WebsiteCity; Port
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Due to its position, Calais since the Middle Ages has been a major port and a very important centre for transport and trading with England. Calais came under English control after Edward III of England captured the city in 1347, followed by a treaty in 1360 that formally assigned Calais to English rule. Calais grew into a thriving centre for wool production, and came to be called the "brightest jewel in the English crown" owing to its great importance as the gateway for the tin, lead, lace and wool trades (or "staples"). Calais remained under English control until its capture by France in 1558. During World War II, the town was virtually razed to the ground: in May 1940, it was a strategic bombing target of the invading German forces who took it during the siege of Calais. The Germans built massive bunkers along the coast in preparation for launching missiles at England.

The old part of the town, Calais proper (known as Calais-Nord), is situated on an artificial island surrounded by canals and harbours. The modern part of the town, St-Pierre, lies to the south and south-east. In the centre of the old town is the Place d'Armes, in which stands the Tour du Guet, or watch-tower, a structure built in the 13th century, which was used as a lighthouse until 1848 when a new lighthouse was built by the port. South east of the Place is the church of Notre-Dame, built during the English occupancy of Calais. Arguably, it is the only church built in the English perpendicular style in all of France. In this church, former French President Charles de Gaulle married Yvonne Vendroux. South of the Place and opposite the Parc St Pierre is the Hôtel-de-ville (the town hall), and the belfry from the early 20th century. Today, Calais is visited by more than 10 million annually. Aside from being a key transport hub, Calais is also a notable fishing port and a centre for fish marketing, and some 3,000 people are still employed in the lace industry for which the town is also famed.

History

Early history

The early history of habitation in the area is limited. It is sometimes claimed that the Romans called the settlement Caletum and that it was the departure point for Julius Caesar's invasion of Britain.[8] However, the name Caletum does not appear in Caeser's accounts of the invasion.[9] Caesar describes his departure point as Portus Itius, which is believed to have been near Boulogne. At that time Calais was an island in the North Sea.[10]

Calais was an English outpost for many centuries while it was an island surrounded by marshes, and difficult to attack from the mainland. At some time before the 10th century, it would have been a Dutch-speaking fishing village on a sandy beach backed by pebbles and a creek,[11] with a natural harbour[12] at the west edge of the early medieval estuary of the river Aa. As the pebble and sand ridge extended eastward from Calais, the haven behind it developed into fen, as the estuary progressively filled with silt and peat. Afterwards, canals were cut between Saint-Omer, the trading centre formerly at the head of the estuary, and three places to the west, centre and east on the newly formed coast: respectively Calais, Gravelines and Dunkirk.[13] Calais was improved by the Count of Flanders in 997 and fortified by the Count of Boulogne in 1224.[8][12]

The first document mentioning the existence of this community is the town charter granted by Mathieu d'Alsace, Count of Boulogne, in 1181 to Gerard de Guelders; Calais thus became part of the county of Boulogne.[8][14] In 1189, Richard the Lionheart is documented to have landed at Calais on his journey to the Third Crusade.[8]

14th–15th century; the Pale of Calais

 
"Le Devouement des Bourgeois de Calais 1347", "The Devotion of the Burghers of Calais". Philippa of Hainault begs King Edward III to spare the lives of the six volunteers for martyrdom. 19th-century mural in Council Chamber, Hôtel de Ville, Calais

English wool trade interests and King Edward III's claims to be heir to the Kingdom of France led to the Battle of Crécy between England and France in 1346,[15] followed by Edward's siege and capture of Calais in 1347.[16] Angered, the English king demanded reprisals against the town's citizens for holding out for so long ("obstinate defense") and ordered that the town's population be killed en masse.[citation needed] He agreed, however, to spare them, on condition that six of the principal citizens would come to him, bareheaded and barefooted and with ropes around their necks, and give themselves up to death.[17] On their arrival he ordered their execution, but pardoned them when his queen, Philippa of Hainault, begged him to spare their lives.[18][19] This event is commemorated in The Burghers of Calais (Les Bourgeois de Calais), one of the most famous sculptures by Auguste Rodin, erected in the city in 1895.[20] Though sparing the lives of the delegation members, King Edward drove out most of the French inhabitants, and settled the town with English. The municipal charter of Calais, previously granted by the Countess of Artois, was reconfirmed by Edward that year (1347).[21]

 
Map showing the situation of 1477, with Calais, the English Pale and neighbouring counties

In 1360 the Treaty of Brétigny assigned Guînes, Marck and Calais—collectively the "Pale of Calais"—to English rule in perpetuity, but this assignment was informally and only partially implemented.[22] On 9 February 1363 the town was made a staple port.[23] It remained part of the Diocese of Thérouanne from 1379, keeping an ecclesiastical tie with France.[24]

The town came to be called the "brightest jewel in the English crown" owing to its great importance as The Staple a gateway port for the tin, lead, cloth and wool trades (or "staples").[25] Its customs revenues amounted at times to a third of the English government's revenue, with wool being the most important element by far. Of its population of about 12,000 people, as many as 5,400 were recorded as having been connected with the wool trade. The governorship or Captaincy of Calais was a lucrative and highly prized public office; the famous Dick Whittington was simultaneously Lord Mayor of the City of London and Mayor of the Staple in 1407.[26]

 
The Marches of Calais temp. Henry VIII. (Top: south, bottom:north): "Cales Market" within citadel, shown at bottom, top "Gyenes Castel", bottom left "Graveling", bottom right "Sand Gat"

Calais was regarded for many years as being an integral part of the Kingdom of England, with its representatives sitting in the English Parliament. The continued English hold on Calais however depended on expensively maintained fortifications, as the town lacked any natural defences. Maintaining Calais was a costly business that was frequently tested by the forces of France and the Duchy of Burgundy, with the Franco-Burgundian border running nearby.[27] The British historian Geoffrey Elton once remarked "Calais—expensive and useless—was better lost than kept".[28] The duration of the English hold over Calais was, to a large extent, the result of the feud between Burgundy and France: both sides coveted the town, but preferred to see England control it rather than their domestic rivals. The stalemate was broken by the victory of the French crown over Burgundy following Joan of Arc's final battle in the siege of Compiègne in 1430, and the later incorporation of the duchy into France.[29]

16th century

In 1532, the English King Henry VIII visited Calais and his men calculated that the town had about 2400 beds and stabling to keep some 2000 horses.[30] Following the royal visit, the town's governance was reformed in 1536, aiming to strengthen ties with England. As part of this move, Calais became a parliamentary borough sending burgesses to the House of Commons of the Parliament of England.[31]

In September 1552, the English adventurer Thomas Stukley, who had been for some time in the French service, betrayed to the authorities in London some French plans for the capture of Calais, to be followed by a descent upon England.[32] Stukley himself might have been the author of these plans.

On 7 January 1558, King Henry II of France sent forces led by Francis, Duke of Guise, who laid siege to Calais.[33] When the French attacked, they were able to surprise the English at the critical strongpoint of Fort Nieulay and the sluice gates, which could have flooded the attackers, remained unopened.[34] The loss was regarded by Queen Mary I of England as a dreadful misfortune. When she heard the news, she reportedly said, "When I am dead and opened, you shall find 'Philip' [her husband] and 'Calais' lying in my heart."[35] The region around Calais, then-known as the Calaisis, was renamed the Pays Reconquis ("Reconquered Country") in commemoration of its recovery by the French.[36] Use of the term is reminiscent of the Spanish Reconquista, with which the French were certainly familiar—and, since it occurred in the context of a war with Spain (Philip II of Spain was at the time Queen Mary's consort), might have been intended as a deliberate snub.[37]

The town was captured by the Spanish on 24 April 1596 in an invasion mounted from the nearby Spanish Netherlands by Archduke Albert of Austria, but it was returned to France under the Treaty of Vervins in May 1598.[38][39]

17th century to World War I

 
George V of the United Kingdom meets French and Belgian officers in Calais in 1918

Calais remained an important maritime city and smuggling centre throughout the 17th century. However, during the next century, the port of Calais began to stagnate gradually, as the nearby ports of Boulogne and Dunkirk began to rise and compete.

The French revolution at the end of the 18th century did not disturb Calais and no executions took place.[40]

In 1805, Calais hosted part of Napoleon's army and invasion fleet for several months before his aborted invasion of Britain.[41] From October to December 1818, the British army used Calais as their departing port to return home after occupying post-Waterloo France. General Murray appointed Sir Manley Power to oversee the evacuation of British troops from France. Cordial relations had been restored by that time and on 3 December, the mayor of Calais wrote a letter to Power to express thanks for his "considerate treatment of the French and of the town of Calais during the embarkation."[42]

The population in 1847 was 12,580, many of whom were English.[43] It was one of the main ports for British travellers to Europe.

In World War I the British Expeditionary Force or BEF arrived in Calais on its way to the nearby frontline cutting through Nord-Pas-de-Calais and Flanders. Calais was a key port for the supply of arms and reinforcements to the Western Front.[44] In the 1930s, the town was known for being a politically socialist stronghold.[45]

World War II

 
Monument to Charles de Gaulle and Winston Churchill in Calais
 
World War II bunkers at Calais
 
Debris from the siege of Calais

Calais was virtually razed to the ground during World War II.[46] In May 1940, it was a key objective of the invading German forces and became the scene of a last-ditch defence—the siege of Calais—which diverted a sizable amount of German forces for several days immediately prior to the Battle of Dunkirk. A total of 3,000 British and 800 French troops, assisted by Royal Navy warships, held out from 22 to 27 May 1940 against the 10th Panzer Division. The town was flattened by artillery and precision dive bombing and only 30 of the 3800-strong defending force were evacuated before the town fell. This may have helped Operation Dynamo, the evacuation of Allied forces at Dunkirk, as 10th Panzer would have been involved on the Dunkirk perimeter had it not been busy at Calais.[47] Between 26 May and 4 June 1940, some 330,000 Allied troops escaped from the Germans at Dunkirk.[48]

During the ensuing German occupation, it became the command post for German forces in the Pas-de-Calais/Flanders region and was very heavily fortified, as the Germans generally believed that the Allies would invade there.[49] It was also used as a launch site for V1 flying bombs and for much of the war, the Germans used the region as the site for railway guns to bombard the south-eastern corner of England. In 1943 they built massive bunkers along the coast in preparation for launching missiles on the southeast of England.[50] Despite heavy preparations for defence against an amphibious assault, the Allied invasion took place well to the west in Normandy on D-Day. Calais was very heavily bombed and shelled in a successful effort to disrupt German communications and persuade them that the Allies would target the Pas-de-Calais for invasion (rather than Normandy). The town, by then largely in ruins, was laid siege to and liberated by General Daniel Spry's 3rd Canadian Infantry Division between 25 September and 1 October 1944.[51] On 27 February 1945 Calais experienced its last bombing raid—this time by Royal Air Force bombers who mistook the town for Dunkirk, which was at that time still occupied by German forces.[52] After the war there was little rebuilding of the historic city and most buildings were modern ones.[citation needed]

21st century – migration issues

Since 1999 or earlier, an increasingly large number of illegal immigrants and asylum seekers started to arrive in the vicinity of Calais, living in the Calais jungle, the nickname given to a series of makeshift camps. The people lived there while attempting to enter the United Kingdom by stowing away on lorries, ferries, cars, or trains travelling through the Port of Calais or the Eurotunnel Calais Terminal,[53] or while waiting for their French asylum claims to be processed.[54] The people were a mix of asylum seekers and economic migrants from Darfur, Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Eritrea and other underdeveloped or conflict-stricken countries in Africa and Asia.

The Calais migrant crisis[55] led to escalating tension between the UK and France in the summer of 2015.[56] The UK blamed France for not doing enough to stop migrants from entering the Channel Tunnel or attempting to scale fences built along the border. The British Prime Minister David Cameron released a statement saying that illegal immigrants would be removed from the UK even if they reached the island.[57] To discourage migrants and refugees from jumping on train shuttles at Calais, the UK government supplied fencing to be installed around the Eurotunnel complex, where the vehicles are loaded onto train shuttles in Calais.

On 26 October 2016, French authorities announced that the camp had been cleared.[58] By January 2017, 500–1,000 migrants, mostly unaccompanied minors, had returned and were living rough in Calais[59] and there has been a presence ever since.[60][61]

Geography and climate

 
Map showing Calais in relation to London and Paris
 
Map of Calais

Calais is located on the Pas de Calais, which marks the boundary between the English Channel and North Sea and located at the opposite end of the Channel Tunnel, 40 kilometres (25 miles)[62] from Dover. On a clear day the White cliffs of Dover can be viewed across the channel.[63] Aside from being an important port and boarding point between France and England, it is at the nucleus of many major railway and highway networks and connected by road to Arras, Lens, Béthune and St. Omer. Dunkirk is located about 37 km (23 mi) to the east.[64] Calais is located 236 km (147 mi) north of the French capital of Paris, or around 295 km (183 mi) by car.[65] The commune of Calais is bordered by the English channel to the north, Sangatte and Coquelles to the west, Coulogne to the south and Marck to the east. The core area of the city is divided into the Old Town area within the old city walls, and the younger suburbs of St. Pierre, which are connected by a boulevard.

Calais is part of the Côte d'Opale (Opal Coast), a cliff-lined section of northern French coast that parallels the white cliffs on the British coast and is part of the same geological formation. It is known for its scenic cliffs such as Cape Blanc Nez and Cape Gris Nez and for its wide area of dunes. Many artists have been inspired by its landscapes, among them the composer Henri Dutilleux, the writers Victor Hugo and Charles Dickens, and the painters J. M. W. Turner, Carolus-Duran, Maurice Boitel and Eugène Boudin. It was the painter Édouard Lévêque [fr] who coined the name for this area in 1911 to describe the distinctive quality of its light.[66]

Calais has a temperate oceanic climate (Cfb in the Köppen climate classification). Temperature ranges are moderate and the winters are cool with unstable weather. It rains on average about 700 to 800 mm (28 to 31 in) per year.

Climate data for Calais (CQF), elevation: 2 m (7 ft), 1991–2010 normals, extremes 1991–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 15.0
(59.0)
18.6
(65.5)
22.6
(72.7)
25.5
(77.9)
31.1
(88.0)
34.0
(93.2)
39.9
(103.8)
35.7
(96.3)
32.0
(89.6)
27.6
(81.7)
20.2
(68.4)
17.0
(62.6)
39.9
(103.8)
Average high °C (°F) 7.4
(45.3)
8.2
(46.8)
10.4
(50.7)
13.3
(55.9)
16.4
(61.5)
19.2
(66.6)
21.7
(71.1)
22.2
(72.0)
19.3
(66.7)
15.3
(59.5)
10.9
(51.6)
7.4
(45.3)
14.3
(57.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.9
(40.8)
5.4
(41.7)
7.2
(45.0)
9.3
(48.7)
12.4
(54.3)
15.1
(59.2)
17.5
(63.5)
17.8
(64.0)
15.3
(59.5)
11.9
(53.4)
8.2
(46.8)
4.9
(40.8)
10.9
(51.6)
Average low °C (°F) 2.4
(36.3)
2.7
(36.9)
3.9
(39.0)
5.3
(41.5)
8.4
(47.1)
11.0
(51.8)
13.2
(55.8)
13.5
(56.3)
11.2
(52.2)
8.4
(47.1)
5.5
(41.9)
2.5
(36.5)
7.4
(45.3)
Record low °C (°F) −14.0
(6.8)
−11.3
(11.7)
−5.9
(21.4)
−5.0
(23.0)
−0.4
(31.3)
3.3
(37.9)
4.9
(40.8)
5.6
(42.1)
0.9
(33.6)
−5.7
(21.7)
−7.1
(19.2)
−13.2
(8.2)
−14.0
(6.8)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 55.3
(2.18)
42.7
(1.68)
39.9
(1.57)
41.3
(1.63)
54.5
(2.15)
53.6
(2.11)
54.8
(2.16)
63.5
(2.50)
63.0
(2.48)
86.2
(3.39)
90.7
(3.57)
77.1
(3.04)
722.6
(28.45)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 11.0 9.3 8.8 8.6 9.1 8.8 8.4 8.4 10.1 11.7 13.3 12.0 119.0
Source: Meteo France[67]

The commune of Calais is divided into 13 quartiers :

  • Beau Marais
  • Cailloux
  • Calais-nord
  • Quartier du Courgain Maritime [fr]
  • Fontinettes
  • Fort-Nieulay
  • Gambetta
  • Nouvelle-France
  • Mi-voix
  • Petit Courgain
  • Plage
  • Pont-du-Leu
  • Saint-Pierre

Demographics

Changes in the number of inhabitants is known throughout the population censuses conducted since 1793 in Calais. Note the massive growth in population from 13,529 in 1881 to 58,969 in 1886, a growth of 335.9%; this is because the city of Saint-Pierre-lès-Calais merged with Calais in 1885.[68] According to the INSEE census of 2017, Calais has 73,911 people (a decrease of 4.4% from 1999).[69] The town's population ranked 60th nationally, down from 53rd in 1999.

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1793 6,549—    
1800 6,996+0.95%
1806 8,102+2.48%
1821 8,854+0.59%
1831 10,437+1.66%
1836 10,865+0.81%
1841 12,508+2.86%
1846 11,444−1.76%
1851 10,993−0.80%
1856 11,969+1.72%
1861 12,934+1.56%
1866 12,727−0.32%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1872 12,843+0.15%
1876 12,573−0.53%
1881 13,529+1.48%
1886 58,969+34.24%
1891 56,867−0.72%
1896 56,940+0.03%
1901 59,743+0.97%
1906 66,627+2.21%
1911 72,322+1.65%
1921 73,001+0.09%
1926 71,629−0.38%
1931 70,213−0.40%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1936 67,568−0.77%
1946 50,048−2.96%
1954 60,340+2.37%
1962 70,372+1.94%
1968 74,624+0.98%
1975 78,820+0.78%
1982 76,527−0.42%
1990 75,309−0.20%
1999 77,317+0.29%
2007 75,293−0.33%
2012 72,589−0.73%
2017 73,911+0.36%
Source: EHESS[68] and INSEE[69]

Economy

 
Town centre

The city's proximity to England has made it a major port for centuries. It is the principal ferry crossing point between England and France, with the vast majority of Channel crossings being made between Dover and Calais. Companies operating from Calais include SeaFrance (currently in liquidation[70]), DFDS Seaways,[71] and P&O Ferries.[72] The French end of the Channel Tunnel is situated in the vicinity of Calais, in Coquelles some 4 miles (6.4 km) to the west of the town. Calais possesses direct rail links to Paris, 148 miles (238 km) to the south. More than 10 million people visit Calais annually.[41]

From medieval times, English companies thrived in Calais. Calais was a particularly important centre in the production and trade of wool and cloth, which outweighed the costs of maintaining the town as part of England. In 1830 some 113 manufacturers were based in Calais and the St Pierre suburbs, the majority of which were English.[73] There are still two major lace factories in Calais with around 700 looms and 3000 employees.[73] The town exports in the early 20th century were lace, chemicals, paper, wines, especially champagne, spirits, hay, straw, wool, potatoes, woven goods, fruit, glass-ware, lace and metal-ware.[74] Principal imports in the early 20th century included cotton and silk goods, coal, iron and steel, petroleum, timber, raw wool, cotton yarn and cork.[74] During the five years 1901–1905 the average annual value of exports was £8,388,000 (£6,363,000 in the years 1896–1900), of imports £4,145,000 (£3,759,000 in 1896–1900).[74]

As a fishing port, Calais has several notable fishing markets including Les Délices de la Mer and Huîtrière Calaisenne on the Boulevard La Fayette, the latter of which is noted for its oysters, lobster and crabs from Brittany. The Emile Fournier et Fils market on the Rue Mouron sells mainly smoked fish including salmon, trout, herring and halibut.[75]

Politics

 
Pierre-Henri Dumont, MP for Calais.

Calais is part of Pas-de-Calais's 7th constituency. The local MP is Republican Pierre-Henri Dumont.

The mayor of Calais has been Natacha Bouchart since 2008, first for the Union for a Popular Movement and then its successor The Republicans. From 1971 to 2008, the mayor was a member of the French Communist Party (PCF): Jean-Jacques Barthe (1971–2000) and Jacky Hénin (2000–2008).[76]

Notable landmarks

Place d'Armes

Place d'Armes is one of the largest squares in the city of Calais. It adjoins the watchtower, and during medieval times was once the heart of the city. While Calais was a territory of England (1347–1558), it became known as Market Square (place du Marché). Only at the end of English rule did it take the name of Place d'Armes. After the reconquest of Calais in 1558 by Francis, Duke of Guise, Francis II gave Calais the right to hold a fair twice a year on the square, which still exists today, as well as a bustling Wednesday and Saturday market.[77]

Hôtel de Ville

The town centre, which has seen significant regeneration over the past decade, is dominated by its distinctive town hall (Hôtel de Ville) at Place du Soldat Inconnu. It was built in the Flemish Renaissance style between 1911 and 1925 to commemorate the unification of the cities of Calais and Saint Pierre in 1885.[78] A previous town hall had been erected in 1818.[79] One of the most elegant landmarks in the city, its ornate 74-metre (246 ft) high clock tower and belfry can be seen from out to sea and chimes throughout the day and has been protected by UNESCO since 2005 as part of a series of belfries across the region.[80] The building parts have also been listed as a series of historic monuments by government decree of 26 June 2003, including its roofs and belfry, main hall, glass roof, the staircase, corridor serving the first floor, the rooms on the first floor (including decoration): the wedding room, the VIP lounge, the lounge of the council and the cabinet room. The hall has stained glass windows and numerous paintings and exquisite decor.[78] It houses police offices.[45]

Église Notre-Dame

 
Église Notre-Dame

Église Notre-Dame is a great church which was originally built in the late 13th century and its tower was added in the late 14th or early 15th century. Like the town hall it is one of the city's most prominent landmarks. It was arguably the only church in the English perpendicular style in France.[81] Much of the current 1400 capacity church dates to 1631–1635.[81] It contains elements of Flemish, Gothic, Anglo-Norman and Tudor architecture. In 1691, an 1800 cubic metre cistern was added to the church under orders by Vauban.[82] The church is dedicated to the Virgin, and built in the form of a cross, consisting of a nave and four aisles—[83] The old grand altar dated to 1628 and was built from Carrara marble wrecked on the coast, during its transit from Genoa to Antwerp. It contained eighteen figures, the two standing on either side of the altar-piece—representing St. Louis and Charlemagne.[83] The organ—of a deep and mellow tone, and highly ornamented by figures in relief—was built at Canterbury sometime around 1700. The pulpit and reading-desk, richly sculptured in oak, is another well-executed piece of ecclesiastical workmanship from St. Omer. The altar-piece, the Assumption, was often attributed to Anthony van Dyck, though in reality it is by Gerard Seghers; whilst the painting over the side altar, once believed to be by Peter Paul Rubens[83] is in fact by Pieter Van Mol. A high and strongly built wall, partaking more of the fortress than a cathedral in its aspect, flanks the building, and protects it from the street where formerly ran the old river, in its course through Calais to the sea.[83]

The square, massive Norman tower has three-arched belfry windows on each face, surmounted by corner turrets, and a conically shaped tower of octagonal proportions, topped again by a short steeple. The tower was a main viewing point for the Anglo-French Survey (1784–1790) which linked the Paris Observatory with the Royal Greenwich Observatory using trigonometry. Cross-channel sightings were made of signal lights at Dover Castle and Fairlight, East Sussex.

The church was assigned as a historic monument by decree of 10 September 1913, only to have its stained glass smashed during a Zeppelin bombardment on 15 January 1915, falling through the roof.[84][85] General de Gaulle married Yvonne Vendroux on 6 April 1921 at the cathedral.[82] The building experienced extensive damage during World War II, and was partially rebuilt, although much of the old altar and furnishings were not replaced.

Towers

The Tour du Guet (Watch Tower), situated in Calais Nord on the Places d'Armes, is one of the few surviving pre-war buildings. Dating from 1229, when Philip I, Count of Boulogne, built the fortifications of Calais, it is one of the oldest monuments of Calais, although the oldest remaining traces date to 1302.[86] It has a height of 35–39 metres (sources differ). An earthquake in 1580 split the tower in two, and at one time it threatened to collapse completely.[87] The tower was repaired in 1606, and then had the purpose of serving as a hall to accommodate the merchants of Calais.[87] It was damaged in 1658 when a young stable boy set fire to it, while it was temporarily being used as royal stables during a visit of King Louis XIV.[88] It was not repaired for some 30 years. In 1770,[89] a bell identical to the original bell of 1348 was cast. Due to its height, from the late 17th century it became an important watchout post for the city for centuries until 1905;[86] the last keeper of the tower was forced to leave in 1926. Abraham Chappe (a brother of Ignace Chappe) installed a telegraph office in the tower in 1816 and operated for 32 years.[79] It was this office which announced the death of Napoleon I to the French public in 1821. It also had the dual function as lighthouse with a rotating beacon fuelled by oil from 1818.[86] The lantern was finally replaced by a new lighthouse on 15 October 1848. During the First World War, it served as a military observation post and narrowly missed destruction during World War II.[87] This tower has been classified as a historic monument since 6 November 1931.[87]

The Calais Lighthouse (Le phare de Calais) was built in 1848, replacing the old watch tower as the lighthouse of the port. The 55-metre-high (180 ft) tower was electrified in 1883 and automated in 1992. The staircase has 271 steps leading up to the lantern. By day it is easily distinguishable from other coastal lighthouses by its white color and black lantern. The lighthouse was classified as a historical monument on 22 November 2010.

Forts

 
The Citadel of Calais

The Citadel, located on the Avenue Pierre Coubertin, was built between 1560 and 1571 on the site of a former medieval castle which was built in 1229 by Philippe de Hureprel.[38] Its purpose of its construction was to fend off would-be invaders, but it wasn't long until the city was successfully invaded by Archduke Albert of Austria on 24 April 1596. Both Louis XIII and Cardinal Richelieu at one time considered expanding the citadel and Calais into a great walled city for military harbour purposes but the proposals came to nothing.[38]

Fort Risban, located on the coast on the Avenue Raymond Poincaré at the port entrance, was built by the English to prevent supplies reaching Calais by sea during the siege in November 1346 and continued to be occupied by them until 1558 when Calais was restored to France. In 1596, the fort was captured by the Spanish Netherlands until May 1598 when it was returned to the French following the Treaty of Vervins. It was rebuilt in 1640.[90] Vauban, who visited the fort some time in the 1680s, described it as "a home for owls, and place to hold the Sabbath" rather than a fortification.[91] During World War II it served as an air raid shelter. It contains the Lancaster Tower, a name often given to the fort itself.[92]

Fort Nieulay, located along the Avenue Roger Salengro originally dated to the 12th or 13th century. During the English invasion in 1346, sluices gates were added as water defences and a fort was built up around it in 1525 on the principle that the people of the fort could defend the town by flooding it.[93] In April and May 1677, Louis XIV and Vauban visited Calais and ordered a complete rebuilding of Fort Nieulay. It was completed in 1679, with the purpose to protect the bridge of Nieulay crossing the Hames River.[94] By 1815 the fort had fallen into a ruined state and it wasn't until 1903 that it was sold and improved by its farmer tenants.[93] The fort was briefly the site of a low-key scuffle with Germans in May 1940.

Museums, theatres and cultural centres

 
Calais Theatre

Calais contains several museums. These include the Musée des Beaux-Arts et de la Dentelle de Calais, Cité internationale de la Dentelle et de la Mode de Calais and the Musée de la Seconde Guerre Mondiale (World War II museum). Cité internationale de la Dentelle et de la Mode de Calais is a lace and fashion museum located in an old Boulart factory on the canalside and contains workshops, a library and a restaurant and regularly puts on fashion shows.[73] The World War II museum is located at Parc St Pierre opposite the town hall and south of the train station. The building is a former Nazi bunker and wartime military headquarters, built in 1941 by the Todt Organisation. The 194-metre-long structure contains twenty rooms with relics and photographs related to World War II, and one room dedicated to World War I.[73][95]

Theatres and cultural centres include Le théâtre municipal, Le Centre Culturel Gérard Philipe, Le Conservatoire à rayonnement départemental (CRD), L'auditorium Didier Lockwood, L'École d'Art de Calais, Le Channel, Le Cinéma Alhambra and La Médiathèque municipale. Le théâtre municipal or Calais Theatre is located on the Boulevard Lafayette and was built in 1903 on a plot of land which was used as a cemetery between 1811 and 1871.[96] The theatre opened in 1905. On the first floor of the façade are statues which represent the performing arts subjects of Poetry, Comedy, Dance and Music.[96]

Monuments and memorials

 
Louis XVIII column

Directly in front of the town hall is a bronze cast of Les Bourgeois de Calais ("The Burghers of Calais"), a sculpture by Auguste Rodin to commemorate six men who were to have been executed by Edward III in 1347. The cast was erected in 1895, funded by a public grant of 10,000 francs.[20] Rodin (who based his design on a fourteenth-century account by Jean Froissart) intended to evoke the viewer's sympathy by emphasizing the pained expressions of the faces of the six men about to be executed.[20]

The Monument des Sauveteurs ("Rescuers' Monument") was installed in 1899 on Boulevard des Alliés, and transferred to the Quartier of Courgain in 1960. It is a bronze sculpture, attributed to Edward Lormier. The Monument Le Pluviôse is a 620 kg (1,367 lb) bronze monument built in 1912 by Émile Oscar Guillaume on the centre of the roundabout near the beach of Calais, commemorating the accidental sinking of the submarine Pluviôse in May 1910, off the beach by the steamer Pas de Calais.[97] Armand Fallières, president of the Republic, and his government came to Calais for a state funeral for its 27 victims. One of these victims, Delpierre Auguste, (1889–1910), drowned at age 21 before the beach at Calais; a dock in the city is named for him. The monument was dedicated on 22 June 1913.

Monument "Jacquard" was erected on the square in 1910, opposite the entrance to the Calais theatre. It commemorates Joseph Marie Jacquard, popular in Calais because of his contribution to the development of lace through his invention of the Jacquard loom.[98] A tall column in the Courgain area of the city commemorates a visit by Louis XVIII.

Parc Richelieu, a garden behind the war memorial, was built in 1862 on the old city ramparts and redesigned in 1956.[99] It contains a statue designed by Yves de Coëtlogon in 1962, remembering both world wars with an allegorical figure, representing Peace, which clutches an olive branch to her breast.[100] Another monument in the Parc Richelieu, erected on 23 April 1994, marks the approximate site of Emma, Lady Hamilton's last resting place. She died in Calais on 15 January 1815.[101]

Hotels and nightclubs

For many years the most famous hotel in Calais was the Hôtel d'Angleterre, often called Dessin's or Dessein's, after the family which owned it for almost a hundred years.[101] Its popularity increased after Laurence Sterne set the early chapters of his 1768 novel A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy there. With the arrival of the railway fewer British visitors stopped in Calais and Dessin's closed in 1860.[101]

Hôtel Meurice de Calais is a hotel, established in 1771 as Le Chariot Royal by the French postmaster, Charles-Augustin Meurice, who would later establish the five-star Hôtel Meurice, one of Paris' most famous luxury hotels. It was one of the earliest hotels on the continent of Europe to specifically cater for the British elite.[102] The hotel was rebuilt in 1954–55.[103] It has 41 en-suite rooms.

The main centre of night activity in Calais is at the Casino Le Touquet's on the Rue Royale and at the 555 Club. Every month, Casino Le Touquet hosts a dinner and dance cabaret. The casino features slot machines, blackjack, roulette, and poker facilities.[104]

Education

There are several schools in Calais. These include Groupe Scolaire Coubertin, Eglise Saint-Pierre, Universite du Littoral, Centre Universitaire,[105] Lycée HQE Léonard de Vinci on Rue du Pasteur Martin Luther-King, École d'Art de Calais on Rue des Soupirants, and the Centre Scolaire Saint-Pierre on Rue du Four à Chaux which provides education in the primary grades, high school, and vocational school.[106] There are at least seven colleges in the city, such as Collège Martin Luther King on Rue Martin Luther King, Collège Nationalisé Lucien Vadez on Avenue Yervant Toumaniantz, Collège Les Dentelliers on Rue Gaillard, College Jean Mace on Rue Maréchaux, Collège République on Place République, Collège Vauban on Rue Orléansville, and Collège Privé Mixte Jeanne d'Arc on Rue Champailler.

Sport

Calais was represented in association football by the Calais RUFC, who competed in the Championnat National. The club was founded 1902 as Racing Club de Calais and in 1974 was renamed as Calais Racing Union Football Club.[107] Calais RUFC had a good reputation in French cup competitions and went as far as the final in the 1999/2000 season, losing out finally to Nantes. Since 2008 they played at the Stade de l'Épopée, a stadium which holds about 12,000 spectators. Calais Racing Union was liquidated in September 2017.[108]

The rugby club in Calais is Amicale Rugby Calaisien.[109] Basketball is popular in Calais with the teams Calais Basket (male)[110] and COB Calais (female)[111] as is volleyball with the Lis Calais (male)[112] and Stella Calais (female) teams.[113] There is also the SOC club which caters in a range of sports including athletics, handball and football and Yacht Club de Calais, a yachting club.[114] Calais also has Les Seagulls, an American football team.[115]

Transport

 
Cranes in the Ferry Terminal, Calais
 
Boulevard Jacquard

Sea

The Port of Calais was the first cable ship port in Europe and is the fourth largest port in France and the largest for passenger traffic.[116] The port accounts for more than a third of economic activity of the town of Calais. Cargo traffic has tripled over the past two decades. In 2007 more than 41.5 million tonnes of traffic passed through Calais with some 11.52 million passengers, 1.4 million trucks and trailers, 2.249 million cars and 4,700 crossings a year.[116] Passenger numbers for the Dover to Calais route in 2018 were 9,168,000.[117] On average, ships sail from the port every 30 minutes.[116] A new 400 million euro project is underway at the port to create a breakwater protecting a pool of 700 meters long, thus allowing virtually all types of ships to stop at Calais.

Rail

As well as the large port, the town is served by three railway stations: Gare de Calais-Fréthun, Gare de Calais-Ville, and Gare des Fontinettes, the former being the first stop on mainland Europe of the Eurostar line. Gare de Calais-Ville is the nearest station to the port with trains to Gare de Boulogne-Ville and either Gare de Lille Flandres or Gare de Lille Europe.

Road

Local bus services are provided by STCE. Free car parking facilities are available in front of the Calais ferry terminal and the maximum stay is three days.[118]

Air

Calais is served by an airport and an airfield. Calais–Dunkerque Airport is located at Marck, 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) east north east of Calais. Saint-Inglevert Airfield is located at Saint-Inglevert, 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) south west of Calais.

Notable people

International relations

Calais is twinned with:[119]

See also

References

Notes

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Bibliography

  • This article incorporates public domain text from the 1911 edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica and Robert Bell Calton's Annals and Legends of Calais (1852).
Books
  • Calton, Robert Bell (1852). Annals and Legends of Calais. J. R. Smith. p. 1.
  • Cooksey, John (1 September 2000). Calais: France. Casemate. ISBN 978-1-58097-011-2.
  • Grummitt, David (2008). The Calais Garrison: War and Military Service in England, 1436–1558. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84383-398-7.
  • Guérin de Tencin, Claudine Alexandrine (1740). The Siege of Calais. Garland Pub. ISBN 978-0-8240-1101-7.
  • "Calais". Handbook for Travellers in France (8th ed.). London: John Murray. 1861. OL 24627024M.
  • Kenna, Michael (31 October 2003). Calais Lace. Nazraeli Press. ISBN 978-1-59005-050-7. Retrieved 5 February 2012.
  • "Calais". Northern France (3rd ed.). Leipsic: Karl Baedeker. 1899. OCLC 2229516. OL 24872324M.
  • Rose, Susan (2008). Calais: an English town in France, 1347–1558. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84383-401-4.
  • Ruler, John (25 January 2011). Cross-Channel France: Nord-Pas de Calais: the land beyond the ports. Bradt Travel Guides. ISBN 978-1-84162-327-6.
  • Sandeman, George Amelius Crawshay (20 August 2008). Calais under English Rule. BiblioBazaar. ISBN 978-0-554-73198-8.
  • Turpyn, Richard (1846). The Chronicle of Calais: in the reigns of Henry VII. and Henry VIII. to the year 1540. Printed for the Camden Society by J. B. Nichols.

External links

  • Official website (in French)
  • Agglomération (in French)
  • Info about the port and city (in English)
  • Info about the port and city (in English)
  • Old maps of Calais, Historic Cities site

calais, this, article, about, town, northern, france, other, uses, disambiguation, kales, redirects, here, other, uses, kales, disambiguation, traditionally, french, kalɛ, listen, port, city, department, which, subprefecture, although, largest, city, departmen. This article is about the town in northern France For other uses see Calais disambiguation Kales redirects here For other uses see Kales disambiguation Calais UK ˈ k ae l eɪ KAL ay US k ae ˈ l eɪ kal AY 3 4 traditionally ˈ k ae l ɪ s KAL iss French kalɛ listen 5 is a port city in the Pas de Calais department of which it is a subprefecture 6 Although Calais is by far the largest city in Pas de Calais the department s prefecture is its third largest city of Arras The population of the city proper is 72 929 that of the urban area is 149 673 2018 7 Calais overlooks the Strait of Dover the narrowest point in the English Channel which is only 34 km 21 mi wide here and is the closest French town to England The White Cliffs of Dover can easily be seen on a clear day from Calais Calais is a major port for ferries between France and England and since 1994 the Channel Tunnel has linked nearby Coquelles to Folkestone by rail Calais Cales Picard Subprefecture and communePort of CalaisFlagCoat of armsLocation of CalaisCalaisShow map of FranceCalaisShow map of Hauts de FranceCoordinates 50 56 53 N 01 51 23 E 50 94806 N 1 85639 E 50 94806 1 85639 Coordinates 50 56 53 N 01 51 23 E 50 94806 N 1 85639 E 50 94806 1 85639CountryFranceRegionHauts de FranceDepartmentPas de CalaisArrondissementCalaisCantonCalais 1 2 and 3IntercommunalityCA Grand Calais Terres et MersGovernment Mayor 2020 2026 Natacha Bouchart 1 LR Area133 5 km2 12 9 sq mi Population Jan 2019 2 72 509 Density2 200 km2 5 600 sq mi DemonymCalaisiensTime zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST INSEE Postal code62193 62100Elevation0 18 m 0 59 ft WebsiteCity Port1 French Land Register data which excludes lakes ponds glaciers gt 1 km2 0 386 sq mi or 247 acres and river estuaries Due to its position Calais since the Middle Ages has been a major port and a very important centre for transport and trading with England Calais came under English control after Edward III of England captured the city in 1347 followed by a treaty in 1360 that formally assigned Calais to English rule Calais grew into a thriving centre for wool production and came to be called the brightest jewel in the English crown owing to its great importance as the gateway for the tin lead lace and wool trades or staples Calais remained under English control until its capture by France in 1558 During World War II the town was virtually razed to the ground in May 1940 it was a strategic bombing target of the invading German forces who took it during the siege of Calais The Germans built massive bunkers along the coast in preparation for launching missiles at England The old part of the town Calais proper known as Calais Nord is situated on an artificial island surrounded by canals and harbours The modern part of the town St Pierre lies to the south and south east In the centre of the old town is the Place d Armes in which stands the Tour du Guet or watch tower a structure built in the 13th century which was used as a lighthouse until 1848 when a new lighthouse was built by the port South east of the Place is the church of Notre Dame built during the English occupancy of Calais Arguably it is the only church built in the English perpendicular style in all of France In this church former French President Charles de Gaulle married Yvonne Vendroux South of the Place and opposite the Parc St Pierre is the Hotel de ville the town hall and the belfry from the early 20th century Today Calais is visited by more than 10 million annually Aside from being a key transport hub Calais is also a notable fishing port and a centre for fish marketing and some 3 000 people are still employed in the lace industry for which the town is also famed Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 14th 15th century the Pale of Calais 1 3 16th century 1 4 17th century to World War I 1 5 World War II 1 6 21st century migration issues 2 Geography and climate 3 Demographics 4 Economy 5 Politics 6 Notable landmarks 6 1 Place d Armes 6 2 Hotel de Ville 6 3 Eglise Notre Dame 6 4 Towers 6 5 Forts 6 6 Museums theatres and cultural centres 6 7 Monuments and memorials 6 8 Hotels and nightclubs 7 Education 8 Sport 9 Transport 9 1 Sea 9 2 Rail 9 3 Road 9 4 Air 10 Notable people 11 International relations 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Notes 13 2 Bibliography 14 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit The early history of habitation in the area is limited It is sometimes claimed that the Romans called the settlement Caletum and that it was the departure point for Julius Caesar s invasion of Britain 8 However the name Caletum does not appear in Caeser s accounts of the invasion 9 Caesar describes his departure point as Portus Itius which is believed to have been near Boulogne At that time Calais was an island in the North Sea 10 Calais was an English outpost for many centuries while it was an island surrounded by marshes and difficult to attack from the mainland At some time before the 10th century it would have been a Dutch speaking fishing village on a sandy beach backed by pebbles and a creek 11 with a natural harbour 12 at the west edge of the early medieval estuary of the river Aa As the pebble and sand ridge extended eastward from Calais the haven behind it developed into fen as the estuary progressively filled with silt and peat Afterwards canals were cut between Saint Omer the trading centre formerly at the head of the estuary and three places to the west centre and east on the newly formed coast respectively Calais Gravelines and Dunkirk 13 Calais was improved by the Count of Flanders in 997 and fortified by the Count of Boulogne in 1224 8 12 The first document mentioning the existence of this community is the town charter granted by Mathieu d Alsace Count of Boulogne in 1181 to Gerard de Guelders Calais thus became part of the county of Boulogne 8 14 In 1189 Richard the Lionheart is documented to have landed at Calais on his journey to the Third Crusade 8 14th 15th century the Pale of Calais Edit Main article Pale of Calais Le Devouement des Bourgeois de Calais 1347 The Devotion of the Burghers of Calais Philippa of Hainault begs King Edward III to spare the lives of the six volunteers for martyrdom 19th century mural in Council Chamber Hotel de Ville Calais English wool trade interests and King Edward III s claims to be heir to the Kingdom of France led to the Battle of Crecy between England and France in 1346 15 followed by Edward s siege and capture of Calais in 1347 16 Angered the English king demanded reprisals against the town s citizens for holding out for so long obstinate defense and ordered that the town s population be killed en masse citation needed He agreed however to spare them on condition that six of the principal citizens would come to him bareheaded and barefooted and with ropes around their necks and give themselves up to death 17 On their arrival he ordered their execution but pardoned them when his queen Philippa of Hainault begged him to spare their lives 18 19 This event is commemorated in The Burghers of Calais Les Bourgeois de Calais one of the most famous sculptures by Auguste Rodin erected in the city in 1895 20 Though sparing the lives of the delegation members King Edward drove out most of the French inhabitants and settled the town with English The municipal charter of Calais previously granted by the Countess of Artois was reconfirmed by Edward that year 1347 21 Map showing the situation of 1477 with Calais the English Pale and neighbouring counties In 1360 the Treaty of Bretigny assigned Guines Marck and Calais collectively the Pale of Calais to English rule in perpetuity but this assignment was informally and only partially implemented 22 On 9 February 1363 the town was made a staple port 23 It remained part of the Diocese of Therouanne from 1379 keeping an ecclesiastical tie with France 24 The town came to be called the brightest jewel in the English crown owing to its great importance as The Staple a gateway port for the tin lead cloth and wool trades or staples 25 Its customs revenues amounted at times to a third of the English government s revenue with wool being the most important element by far Of its population of about 12 000 people as many as 5 400 were recorded as having been connected with the wool trade The governorship or Captaincy of Calais was a lucrative and highly prized public office the famous Dick Whittington was simultaneously Lord Mayor of the City of London and Mayor of the Staple in 1407 26 The Marches of Calais temp Henry VIII Top south bottom north Cales Market within citadel shown at bottom top Gyenes Castel bottom left Graveling bottom right Sand Gat Calais was regarded for many years as being an integral part of the Kingdom of England with its representatives sitting in the English Parliament The continued English hold on Calais however depended on expensively maintained fortifications as the town lacked any natural defences Maintaining Calais was a costly business that was frequently tested by the forces of France and the Duchy of Burgundy with the Franco Burgundian border running nearby 27 The British historian Geoffrey Elton once remarked Calais expensive and useless was better lost than kept 28 The duration of the English hold over Calais was to a large extent the result of the feud between Burgundy and France both sides coveted the town but preferred to see England control it rather than their domestic rivals The stalemate was broken by the victory of the French crown over Burgundy following Joan of Arc s final battle in the siege of Compiegne in 1430 and the later incorporation of the duchy into France 29 16th century Edit In 1532 the English King Henry VIII visited Calais and his men calculated that the town had about 2400 beds and stabling to keep some 2000 horses 30 Following the royal visit the town s governance was reformed in 1536 aiming to strengthen ties with England As part of this move Calais became a parliamentary borough sending burgesses to the House of Commons of the Parliament of England 31 In September 1552 the English adventurer Thomas Stukley who had been for some time in the French service betrayed to the authorities in London some French plans for the capture of Calais to be followed by a descent upon England 32 Stukley himself might have been the author of these plans On 7 January 1558 King Henry II of France sent forces led by Francis Duke of Guise who laid siege to Calais 33 When the French attacked they were able to surprise the English at the critical strongpoint of Fort Nieulay and the sluice gates which could have flooded the attackers remained unopened 34 The loss was regarded by Queen Mary I of England as a dreadful misfortune When she heard the news she reportedly said When I am dead and opened you shall find Philip her husband and Calais lying in my heart 35 The region around Calais then known as the Calaisis was renamed the Pays Reconquis Reconquered Country in commemoration of its recovery by the French 36 Use of the term is reminiscent of the Spanish Reconquista with which the French were certainly familiar and since it occurred in the context of a war with Spain Philip II of Spain was at the time Queen Mary s consort might have been intended as a deliberate snub 37 The town was captured by the Spanish on 24 April 1596 in an invasion mounted from the nearby Spanish Netherlands by Archduke Albert of Austria but it was returned to France under the Treaty of Vervins in May 1598 38 39 17th century to World War I Edit George V of the United Kingdom meets French and Belgian officers in Calais in 1918 Calais remained an important maritime city and smuggling centre throughout the 17th century However during the next century the port of Calais began to stagnate gradually as the nearby ports of Boulogne and Dunkirk began to rise and compete The French revolution at the end of the 18th century did not disturb Calais and no executions took place 40 In 1805 Calais hosted part of Napoleon s army and invasion fleet for several months before his aborted invasion of Britain 41 From October to December 1818 the British army used Calais as their departing port to return home after occupying post Waterloo France General Murray appointed Sir Manley Power to oversee the evacuation of British troops from France Cordial relations had been restored by that time and on 3 December the mayor of Calais wrote a letter to Power to express thanks for his considerate treatment of the French and of the town of Calais during the embarkation 42 The population in 1847 was 12 580 many of whom were English 43 It was one of the main ports for British travellers to Europe In World War I the British Expeditionary Force or BEF arrived in Calais on its way to the nearby frontline cutting through Nord Pas de Calais and Flanders Calais was a key port for the supply of arms and reinforcements to the Western Front 44 In the 1930s the town was known for being a politically socialist stronghold 45 World War II Edit Monument to Charles de Gaulle and Winston Churchill in Calais World War II bunkers at Calais Debris from the siege of Calais Calais was virtually razed to the ground during World War II 46 In May 1940 it was a key objective of the invading German forces and became the scene of a last ditch defence the siege of Calais which diverted a sizable amount of German forces for several days immediately prior to the Battle of Dunkirk A total of 3 000 British and 800 French troops assisted by Royal Navy warships held out from 22 to 27 May 1940 against the 10th Panzer Division The town was flattened by artillery and precision dive bombing and only 30 of the 3800 strong defending force were evacuated before the town fell This may have helped Operation Dynamo the evacuation of Allied forces at Dunkirk as 10th Panzer would have been involved on the Dunkirk perimeter had it not been busy at Calais 47 Between 26 May and 4 June 1940 some 330 000 Allied troops escaped from the Germans at Dunkirk 48 During the ensuing German occupation it became the command post for German forces in the Pas de Calais Flanders region and was very heavily fortified as the Germans generally believed that the Allies would invade there 49 It was also used as a launch site for V1 flying bombs and for much of the war the Germans used the region as the site for railway guns to bombard the south eastern corner of England In 1943 they built massive bunkers along the coast in preparation for launching missiles on the southeast of England 50 Despite heavy preparations for defence against an amphibious assault the Allied invasion took place well to the west in Normandy on D Day Calais was very heavily bombed and shelled in a successful effort to disrupt German communications and persuade them that the Allies would target the Pas de Calais for invasion rather than Normandy The town by then largely in ruins was laid siege to and liberated by General Daniel Spry s 3rd Canadian Infantry Division between 25 September and 1 October 1944 51 On 27 February 1945 Calais experienced its last bombing raid this time by Royal Air Force bombers who mistook the town for Dunkirk which was at that time still occupied by German forces 52 After the war there was little rebuilding of the historic city and most buildings were modern ones citation needed 21st century migration issues Edit Main article Migrants around Calais Since 1999 or earlier an increasingly large number of illegal immigrants and asylum seekers started to arrive in the vicinity of Calais living in the Calais jungle the nickname given to a series of makeshift camps The people lived there while attempting to enter the United Kingdom by stowing away on lorries ferries cars or trains travelling through the Port of Calais or the Eurotunnel Calais Terminal 53 or while waiting for their French asylum claims to be processed 54 The people were a mix of asylum seekers and economic migrants from Darfur Afghanistan Syria Iraq Eritrea and other underdeveloped or conflict stricken countries in Africa and Asia The Calais migrant crisis 55 led to escalating tension between the UK and France in the summer of 2015 56 The UK blamed France for not doing enough to stop migrants from entering the Channel Tunnel or attempting to scale fences built along the border The British Prime Minister David Cameron released a statement saying that illegal immigrants would be removed from the UK even if they reached the island 57 To discourage migrants and refugees from jumping on train shuttles at Calais the UK government supplied fencing to be installed around the Eurotunnel complex where the vehicles are loaded onto train shuttles in Calais On 26 October 2016 French authorities announced that the camp had been cleared 58 By January 2017 500 1 000 migrants mostly unaccompanied minors had returned and were living rough in Calais 59 and there has been a presence ever since 60 61 Geography and climate Edit Map showing Calais in relation to London and Paris Map of Calais Calais is located on the Pas de Calais which marks the boundary between the English Channel and North Sea and located at the opposite end of the Channel Tunnel 40 kilometres 25 miles 62 from Dover On a clear day the White cliffs of Dover can be viewed across the channel 63 Aside from being an important port and boarding point between France and England it is at the nucleus of many major railway and highway networks and connected by road to Arras Lens Bethune and St Omer Dunkirk is located about 37 km 23 mi to the east 64 Calais is located 236 km 147 mi north of the French capital of Paris or around 295 km 183 mi by car 65 The commune of Calais is bordered by the English channel to the north Sangatte and Coquelles to the west Coulogne to the south and Marck to the east The core area of the city is divided into the Old Town area within the old city walls and the younger suburbs of St Pierre which are connected by a boulevard Calais is part of the Cote d Opale Opal Coast a cliff lined section of northern French coast that parallels the white cliffs on the British coast and is part of the same geological formation It is known for its scenic cliffs such as Cape Blanc Nez and Cape Gris Nez and for its wide area of dunes Many artists have been inspired by its landscapes among them the composer Henri Dutilleux the writers Victor Hugo and Charles Dickens and the painters J M W Turner Carolus Duran Maurice Boitel and Eugene Boudin It was the painter Edouard Leveque fr who coined the name for this area in 1911 to describe the distinctive quality of its light 66 Calais has a temperate oceanic climate Cfb in the Koppen climate classification Temperature ranges are moderate and the winters are cool with unstable weather It rains on average about 700 to 800 mm 28 to 31 in per year Climate data for Calais CQF elevation 2 m 7 ft 1991 2010 normals extremes 1991 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 15 0 59 0 18 6 65 5 22 6 72 7 25 5 77 9 31 1 88 0 34 0 93 2 39 9 103 8 35 7 96 3 32 0 89 6 27 6 81 7 20 2 68 4 17 0 62 6 39 9 103 8 Average high C F 7 4 45 3 8 2 46 8 10 4 50 7 13 3 55 9 16 4 61 5 19 2 66 6 21 7 71 1 22 2 72 0 19 3 66 7 15 3 59 5 10 9 51 6 7 4 45 3 14 3 57 7 Daily mean C F 4 9 40 8 5 4 41 7 7 2 45 0 9 3 48 7 12 4 54 3 15 1 59 2 17 5 63 5 17 8 64 0 15 3 59 5 11 9 53 4 8 2 46 8 4 9 40 8 10 9 51 6 Average low C F 2 4 36 3 2 7 36 9 3 9 39 0 5 3 41 5 8 4 47 1 11 0 51 8 13 2 55 8 13 5 56 3 11 2 52 2 8 4 47 1 5 5 41 9 2 5 36 5 7 4 45 3 Record low C F 14 0 6 8 11 3 11 7 5 9 21 4 5 0 23 0 0 4 31 3 3 3 37 9 4 9 40 8 5 6 42 1 0 9 33 6 5 7 21 7 7 1 19 2 13 2 8 2 14 0 6 8 Average precipitation mm inches 55 3 2 18 42 7 1 68 39 9 1 57 41 3 1 63 54 5 2 15 53 6 2 11 54 8 2 16 63 5 2 50 63 0 2 48 86 2 3 39 90 7 3 57 77 1 3 04 722 6 28 45 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 11 0 9 3 8 8 8 6 9 1 8 8 8 4 8 4 10 1 11 7 13 3 12 0 119 0Source Meteo France 67 The commune of Calais is divided into 13 quartiers Beau Marais Cailloux Calais nord Quartier du Courgain Maritime fr Fontinettes Fort Nieulay Gambetta Nouvelle France Mi voix Petit Courgain Plage Pont du Leu Saint PierreDemographics EditChanges in the number of inhabitants is known throughout the population censuses conducted since 1793 in Calais Note the massive growth in population from 13 529 in 1881 to 58 969 in 1886 a growth of 335 9 this is because the city of Saint Pierre les Calais merged with Calais in 1885 68 According to the INSEE census of 2017 Calais has 73 911 people a decrease of 4 4 from 1999 69 The town s population ranked 60th nationally down from 53rd in 1999 Historical populationYearPop p a 17936 549 18006 996 0 95 18068 102 2 48 18218 854 0 59 183110 437 1 66 183610 865 0 81 184112 508 2 86 184611 444 1 76 185110 993 0 80 185611 969 1 72 186112 934 1 56 186612 727 0 32 YearPop p a 187212 843 0 15 187612 573 0 53 188113 529 1 48 188658 969 34 24 189156 867 0 72 189656 940 0 03 190159 743 0 97 190666 627 2 21 191172 322 1 65 192173 001 0 09 192671 629 0 38 193170 213 0 40 YearPop p a 193667 568 0 77 194650 048 2 96 195460 340 2 37 196270 372 1 94 196874 624 0 98 197578 820 0 78 198276 527 0 42 199075 309 0 20 199977 317 0 29 200775 293 0 33 201272 589 0 73 201773 911 0 36 Source EHESS 68 and INSEE 69 Economy Edit Town centre The city s proximity to England has made it a major port for centuries It is the principal ferry crossing point between England and France with the vast majority of Channel crossings being made between Dover and Calais Companies operating from Calais include SeaFrance currently in liquidation 70 DFDS Seaways 71 and P amp O Ferries 72 The French end of the Channel Tunnel is situated in the vicinity of Calais in Coquelles some 4 miles 6 4 km to the west of the town Calais possesses direct rail links to Paris 148 miles 238 km to the south More than 10 million people visit Calais annually 41 From medieval times English companies thrived in Calais Calais was a particularly important centre in the production and trade of wool and cloth which outweighed the costs of maintaining the town as part of England In 1830 some 113 manufacturers were based in Calais and the St Pierre suburbs the majority of which were English 73 There are still two major lace factories in Calais with around 700 looms and 3000 employees 73 The town exports in the early 20th century were lace chemicals paper wines especially champagne spirits hay straw wool potatoes woven goods fruit glass ware lace and metal ware 74 Principal imports in the early 20th century included cotton and silk goods coal iron and steel petroleum timber raw wool cotton yarn and cork 74 During the five years 1901 1905 the average annual value of exports was 8 388 000 6 363 000 in the years 1896 1900 of imports 4 145 000 3 759 000 in 1896 1900 74 As a fishing port Calais has several notable fishing markets including Les Delices de la Mer and Huitriere Calaisenne on the Boulevard La Fayette the latter of which is noted for its oysters lobster and crabs from Brittany The Emile Fournier et Fils market on the Rue Mouron sells mainly smoked fish including salmon trout herring and halibut 75 Politics Edit Pierre Henri Dumont MP for Calais Calais is part of Pas de Calais s 7th constituency The local MP is Republican Pierre Henri Dumont The mayor of Calais has been Natacha Bouchart since 2008 first for the Union for a Popular Movement and then its successor The Republicans From 1971 to 2008 the mayor was a member of the French Communist Party PCF Jean Jacques Barthe 1971 2000 and Jacky Henin 2000 2008 76 Notable landmarks EditPlace d Armes Edit Place d Armes is one of the largest squares in the city of Calais It adjoins the watchtower and during medieval times was once the heart of the city While Calais was a territory of England 1347 1558 it became known as Market Square place du Marche Only at the end of English rule did it take the name of Place d Armes After the reconquest of Calais in 1558 by Francis Duke of Guise Francis II gave Calais the right to hold a fair twice a year on the square which still exists today as well as a bustling Wednesday and Saturday market 77 Hotel de Ville Edit Hotel de Ville The town centre which has seen significant regeneration over the past decade is dominated by its distinctive town hall Hotel de Ville at Place du Soldat Inconnu It was built in the Flemish Renaissance style between 1911 and 1925 to commemorate the unification of the cities of Calais and Saint Pierre in 1885 78 A previous town hall had been erected in 1818 79 One of the most elegant landmarks in the city its ornate 74 metre 246 ft high clock tower and belfry can be seen from out to sea and chimes throughout the day and has been protected by UNESCO since 2005 as part of a series of belfries across the region 80 The building parts have also been listed as a series of historic monuments by government decree of 26 June 2003 including its roofs and belfry main hall glass roof the staircase corridor serving the first floor the rooms on the first floor including decoration the wedding room the VIP lounge the lounge of the council and the cabinet room The hall has stained glass windows and numerous paintings and exquisite decor 78 It houses police offices 45 Eglise Notre Dame Edit Eglise Notre Dame Eglise Notre Dame is a great church which was originally built in the late 13th century and its tower was added in the late 14th or early 15th century Like the town hall it is one of the city s most prominent landmarks It was arguably the only church in the English perpendicular style in France 81 Much of the current 1400 capacity church dates to 1631 1635 81 It contains elements of Flemish Gothic Anglo Norman and Tudor architecture In 1691 an 1800 cubic metre cistern was added to the church under orders by Vauban 82 The church is dedicated to the Virgin and built in the form of a cross consisting of a nave and four aisles 83 The old grand altar dated to 1628 and was built from Carrara marble wrecked on the coast during its transit from Genoa to Antwerp It contained eighteen figures the two standing on either side of the altar piece representing St Louis and Charlemagne 83 The organ of a deep and mellow tone and highly ornamented by figures in relief was built at Canterbury sometime around 1700 The pulpit and reading desk richly sculptured in oak is another well executed piece of ecclesiastical workmanship from St Omer The altar piece the Assumption was often attributed to Anthony van Dyck though in reality it is by Gerard Seghers whilst the painting over the side altar once believed to be by Peter Paul Rubens 83 is in fact by Pieter Van Mol A high and strongly built wall partaking more of the fortress than a cathedral in its aspect flanks the building and protects it from the street where formerly ran the old river in its course through Calais to the sea 83 The square massive Norman tower has three arched belfry windows on each face surmounted by corner turrets and a conically shaped tower of octagonal proportions topped again by a short steeple The tower was a main viewing point for the Anglo French Survey 1784 1790 which linked the Paris Observatory with the Royal Greenwich Observatory using trigonometry Cross channel sightings were made of signal lights at Dover Castle and Fairlight East Sussex The church was assigned as a historic monument by decree of 10 September 1913 only to have its stained glass smashed during a Zeppelin bombardment on 15 January 1915 falling through the roof 84 85 General de Gaulle married Yvonne Vendroux on 6 April 1921 at the cathedral 82 The building experienced extensive damage during World War II and was partially rebuilt although much of the old altar and furnishings were not replaced Towers Edit Tour du Guet The Tour du Guet Watch Tower situated in Calais Nord on the Places d Armes is one of the few surviving pre war buildings Dating from 1229 when Philip I Count of Boulogne built the fortifications of Calais it is one of the oldest monuments of Calais although the oldest remaining traces date to 1302 86 It has a height of 35 39 metres sources differ An earthquake in 1580 split the tower in two and at one time it threatened to collapse completely 87 The tower was repaired in 1606 and then had the purpose of serving as a hall to accommodate the merchants of Calais 87 It was damaged in 1658 when a young stable boy set fire to it while it was temporarily being used as royal stables during a visit of King Louis XIV 88 It was not repaired for some 30 years In 1770 89 a bell identical to the original bell of 1348 was cast Due to its height from the late 17th century it became an important watchout post for the city for centuries until 1905 86 the last keeper of the tower was forced to leave in 1926 Abraham Chappe a brother of Ignace Chappe installed a telegraph office in the tower in 1816 and operated for 32 years 79 It was this office which announced the death of Napoleon I to the French public in 1821 It also had the dual function as lighthouse with a rotating beacon fuelled by oil from 1818 86 The lantern was finally replaced by a new lighthouse on 15 October 1848 During the First World War it served as a military observation post and narrowly missed destruction during World War II 87 This tower has been classified as a historic monument since 6 November 1931 87 The Calais Lighthouse Le phare de Calais was built in 1848 replacing the old watch tower as the lighthouse of the port The 55 metre high 180 ft tower was electrified in 1883 and automated in 1992 The staircase has 271 steps leading up to the lantern By day it is easily distinguishable from other coastal lighthouses by its white color and black lantern The lighthouse was classified as a historical monument on 22 November 2010 Forts Edit The Citadel of Calais The Citadel located on the Avenue Pierre Coubertin was built between 1560 and 1571 on the site of a former medieval castle which was built in 1229 by Philippe de Hureprel 38 Its purpose of its construction was to fend off would be invaders but it wasn t long until the city was successfully invaded by Archduke Albert of Austria on 24 April 1596 Both Louis XIII and Cardinal Richelieu at one time considered expanding the citadel and Calais into a great walled city for military harbour purposes but the proposals came to nothing 38 Fort Risban located on the coast on the Avenue Raymond Poincare at the port entrance was built by the English to prevent supplies reaching Calais by sea during the siege in November 1346 and continued to be occupied by them until 1558 when Calais was restored to France In 1596 the fort was captured by the Spanish Netherlands until May 1598 when it was returned to the French following the Treaty of Vervins It was rebuilt in 1640 90 Vauban who visited the fort some time in the 1680s described it as a home for owls and place to hold the Sabbath rather than a fortification 91 During World War II it served as an air raid shelter It contains the Lancaster Tower a name often given to the fort itself 92 Fort Nieulay located along the Avenue Roger Salengro originally dated to the 12th or 13th century During the English invasion in 1346 sluices gates were added as water defences and a fort was built up around it in 1525 on the principle that the people of the fort could defend the town by flooding it 93 In April and May 1677 Louis XIV and Vauban visited Calais and ordered a complete rebuilding of Fort Nieulay It was completed in 1679 with the purpose to protect the bridge of Nieulay crossing the Hames River 94 By 1815 the fort had fallen into a ruined state and it wasn t until 1903 that it was sold and improved by its farmer tenants 93 The fort was briefly the site of a low key scuffle with Germans in May 1940 Museums theatres and cultural centres Edit Calais Theatre Calais contains several museums These include the Musee des Beaux Arts et de la Dentelle de Calais Cite internationale de la Dentelle et de la Mode de Calais and the Musee de la Seconde Guerre Mondiale World War II museum Cite internationale de la Dentelle et de la Mode de Calais is a lace and fashion museum located in an old Boulart factory on the canalside and contains workshops a library and a restaurant and regularly puts on fashion shows 73 The World War II museum is located at Parc St Pierre opposite the town hall and south of the train station The building is a former Nazi bunker and wartime military headquarters built in 1941 by the Todt Organisation The 194 metre long structure contains twenty rooms with relics and photographs related to World War II and one room dedicated to World War I 73 95 Theatres and cultural centres include Le theatre municipal Le Centre Culturel Gerard Philipe Le Conservatoire a rayonnement departemental CRD L auditorium Didier Lockwood L Ecole d Art de Calais Le Channel Le Cinema Alhambra and La Mediatheque municipale Le theatre municipal or Calais Theatre is located on the Boulevard Lafayette and was built in 1903 on a plot of land which was used as a cemetery between 1811 and 1871 96 The theatre opened in 1905 On the first floor of the facade are statues which represent the performing arts subjects of Poetry Comedy Dance and Music 96 Monuments and memorials Edit The Burghers of Calais Louis XVIII column Directly in front of the town hall is a bronze cast of Les Bourgeois de Calais The Burghers of Calais a sculpture by Auguste Rodin to commemorate six men who were to have been executed by Edward III in 1347 The cast was erected in 1895 funded by a public grant of 10 000 francs 20 Rodin who based his design on a fourteenth century account by Jean Froissart intended to evoke the viewer s sympathy by emphasizing the pained expressions of the faces of the six men about to be executed 20 The Monument des Sauveteurs Rescuers Monument was installed in 1899 on Boulevard des Allies and transferred to the Quartier of Courgain in 1960 It is a bronze sculpture attributed to Edward Lormier The Monument Le Pluviose is a 620 kg 1 367 lb bronze monument built in 1912 by Emile Oscar Guillaume on the centre of the roundabout near the beach of Calais commemorating the accidental sinking of the submarine Pluviose in May 1910 off the beach by the steamer Pas de Calais 97 Armand Fallieres president of the Republic and his government came to Calais for a state funeral for its 27 victims One of these victims Delpierre Auguste 1889 1910 drowned at age 21 before the beach at Calais a dock in the city is named for him The monument was dedicated on 22 June 1913 Monument Jacquard was erected on the square in 1910 opposite the entrance to the Calais theatre It commemorates Joseph Marie Jacquard popular in Calais because of his contribution to the development of lace through his invention of the Jacquard loom 98 A tall column in the Courgain area of the city commemorates a visit by Louis XVIII Parc Richelieu a garden behind the war memorial was built in 1862 on the old city ramparts and redesigned in 1956 99 It contains a statue designed by Yves de Coetlogon in 1962 remembering both world wars with an allegorical figure representing Peace which clutches an olive branch to her breast 100 Another monument in the Parc Richelieu erected on 23 April 1994 marks the approximate site of Emma Lady Hamilton s last resting place She died in Calais on 15 January 1815 101 Hotels and nightclubs Edit For many years the most famous hotel in Calais was the Hotel d Angleterre often called Dessin s or Dessein s after the family which owned it for almost a hundred years 101 Its popularity increased after Laurence Sterne set the early chapters of his 1768 novel A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy there With the arrival of the railway fewer British visitors stopped in Calais and Dessin s closed in 1860 101 Hotel Meurice de Calais is a hotel established in 1771 as Le Chariot Royal by the French postmaster Charles Augustin Meurice who would later establish the five star Hotel Meurice one of Paris most famous luxury hotels It was one of the earliest hotels on the continent of Europe to specifically cater for the British elite 102 The hotel was rebuilt in 1954 55 103 It has 41 en suite rooms The main centre of night activity in Calais is at the Casino Le Touquet s on the Rue Royale and at the 555 Club Every month Casino Le Touquet hosts a dinner and dance cabaret The casino features slot machines blackjack roulette and poker facilities 104 Education EditThere are several schools in Calais These include Groupe Scolaire Coubertin Eglise Saint Pierre Universite du Littoral Centre Universitaire 105 Lycee HQE Leonard de Vinci on Rue du Pasteur Martin Luther King Ecole d Art de Calais on Rue des Soupirants and the Centre Scolaire Saint Pierre on Rue du Four a Chaux which provides education in the primary grades high school and vocational school 106 There are at least seven colleges in the city such as College Martin Luther King on Rue Martin Luther King College Nationalise Lucien Vadez on Avenue Yervant Toumaniantz College Les Dentelliers on Rue Gaillard College Jean Mace on Rue Marechaux College Republique on Place Republique College Vauban on Rue Orleansville and College Prive Mixte Jeanne d Arc on Rue Champailler Sport EditCalais was represented in association football by the Calais RUFC who competed in the Championnat National The club was founded 1902 as Racing Club de Calais and in 1974 was renamed as Calais Racing Union Football Club 107 Calais RUFC had a good reputation in French cup competitions and went as far as the final in the 1999 2000 season losing out finally to Nantes Since 2008 they played at the Stade de l Epopee a stadium which holds about 12 000 spectators Calais Racing Union was liquidated in September 2017 108 The rugby club in Calais is Amicale Rugby Calaisien 109 Basketball is popular in Calais with the teams Calais Basket male 110 and COB Calais female 111 as is volleyball with the Lis Calais male 112 and Stella Calais female teams 113 There is also the SOC club which caters in a range of sports including athletics handball and football and Yacht Club de Calais a yachting club 114 Calais also has Les Seagulls an American football team 115 Transport Edit Cranes in the Ferry Terminal Calais Boulevard Jacquard Sea Edit Main article Port of Calais The Port of Calais was the first cable ship port in Europe and is the fourth largest port in France and the largest for passenger traffic 116 The port accounts for more than a third of economic activity of the town of Calais Cargo traffic has tripled over the past two decades In 2007 more than 41 5 million tonnes of traffic passed through Calais with some 11 52 million passengers 1 4 million trucks and trailers 2 249 million cars and 4 700 crossings a year 116 Passenger numbers for the Dover to Calais route in 2018 were 9 168 000 117 On average ships sail from the port every 30 minutes 116 A new 400 million euro project is underway at the port to create a breakwater protecting a pool of 700 meters long thus allowing virtually all types of ships to stop at Calais Rail Edit As well as the large port the town is served by three railway stations Gare de Calais Frethun Gare de Calais Ville and Gare des Fontinettes the former being the first stop on mainland Europe of the Eurostar line Gare de Calais Ville is the nearest station to the port with trains to Gare de Boulogne Ville and either Gare de Lille Flandres or Gare de Lille Europe Road Edit Local bus services are provided by STCE Free car parking facilities are available in front of the Calais ferry terminal and the maximum stay is three days 118 Air Edit Calais is served by an airport and an airfield Calais Dunkerque Airport is located at Marck 7 kilometres 4 3 mi east north east of Calais Saint Inglevert Airfield is located at Saint Inglevert 13 kilometres 8 1 mi south west of Calais Notable people EditMain category People from CalaisInternational relations EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in France Calais is twinned with 119 Bardejov Slovakia since 6 September 2002 Brăila Romania since 8 May 2002 Duisburg Germany since 25 June 1964 Dover Kent United Kingdom since June 1973 Wismar Germany since December 1971 Xiangtan ChinaSee also Edit France portalCommunes of the Pas de Calais department France UK borderReferences EditNotes Edit Repertoire national des elus les maires data gouv fr Plateforme ouverte des donnees publiques francaises in French 2 December 2020 Populations legales 2019 The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies 29 December 2021 Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Jones Daniel 2011 Roach Peter Setter Jane Esling John eds Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 15255 6 Picard Cales West Flemish Kales INSEE commune file Comparateur de territoire Aire d attraction des villes 2020 de Calais 073 Commune de Calais 62193 INSEE a b c d History Calais ws Archived from the original on 7 February 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 C IVLI CAESARIS COMMENTARIORVM DE BELLO GALLICO LIBER QVARTVS Adrian Goldsworthy Caesar page 338 Delattre Ch Meriaux E and Waterlot M 1973 Region du nord Flandre Artois Boulonnais Picardie Guides geologiques regionaux Paris Masson ISBN 2 225 36795 7 Fig 18 a b Thomas Cook Ltd 1877 Cook s tourist s handbook for Holland Belgium and the Rhine Thomas Cook amp Son Retrieved 5 February 2012 The pre siltation counterpart of Dunkirk was Bergues Malo Henri 1898 Un grand feudataire Renaud de Dammartin et la coalition de Bouvines contribution a l etude du regne de Philippe Auguste H Champion Tucker Spencer 2009 A global chronology of conflict from the ancient world to the modern Middle East ABC CLIO p 304 ISBN 978 1 85109 667 1 Baldwin Thomas 1856 Lippincott s pronouncing gazetteer a complete pronouncing gazetteer or geographical dictionary of the world J B Lippincott p 332 Goodrich Samuel Griswold 1861 A pictorial history of France E H Butler amp Co p 124 Larrington Carolyne 2004 Women and Writing in Medieval Europe A Sourcebook Taylor and Francis p 180 ISBN 978 0 203 35824 5 Tresemer David Ward Schiappacasse Robert 2007 Star wisdom amp Rudolf Steiner a life seen through the oracle of the solar cross SteinerBooks p 277 ISBN 978 0 88010 574 3 a b c Elsen Albert Edward Jamison Rosalyn Frankel Barryte Bernard Iris amp B Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University 13 March 2003 Rodin s art the Rodin Collection of the Iris amp B Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University Oxford University Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 19 513381 3 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Finance and Trade Under Edward Iii Manchester University Press ND 1965 p 12 GGKEY ZB8KKXHK4QY Retrieved 5 February 2012 Grummitt David 2008 The Calais Garrison war and military service in England 1436 1558 Boydell amp Brewer Ltd p 143 ISBN 978 1 84383 398 7 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Rose Susan 2008 Calais an English town in France 1347 1558 Boydell amp Brewer Ltd p 44 ISBN 978 1 84383 401 4 Patourel John Le 1984 Feudal empires Norman and Plantagenet Continuum International Publishing Group p 1 ISBN 978 0 907628 22 4 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Froude James Anthony 1870 History of England from the fall of Wolsey to the defeat of the Spanish Armada Longmans Green and Co p 75 Arnold Baker Charles 2001 The companion to British history Routledge p 220 ISBN 978 0 415 18583 7 The Chronicles of Enguerrand de Monstrelet 1853 p 262 Rose 2008 p 172 Villalon L J Andrew Kagay Donald J 2005 The Hundred Years War a wider focus BRILL p 430 ISBN 978 90 04 13969 5 Calais 1846 John Gough Nichols ed The chronicle of Calais in the reigns of Henry vii and Henry viii Camden society p 26 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Calais in Bindoff S T 1982 The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 Boydell and Brewer Froude James Anthony 1860 History of England from the fall of Wolsey to the death of Elizabeth Parker p 453 Groot Wim de 2005 The seventh window the king s window donated by Philip II and Mary Tudor to Sint Janskerk in Gouda 1557 Uitgeverij Verloren p 25 ISBN 978 90 6550 822 5 The London encyclopaedia or Universal dictionary of science art literature and practical mechanics comprising a popular view of the present state of knowledge 1829 p 15 Holinshed Raphael 1808 1586 Holinshed s chronicles of England Scotland and Ireland Vol 4 England Ellis Sir H ed London J Johnson et al 952 p Turpyn Richard 1846 The chronicle of Calais in the reigns of Henry VII and Henry VIII to the year 1540 British Library Printed for the Camden Society by J B Nichols p 24 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Larousse Pierre 1960 Grand Larousse encyclopedique Librarire Larousse p 59 a b c La Citadelle Calais ws Retrieved 5 February 2012 Crowe Eyre Evans 1830 The history of France Printed for Longman Rees Orme Brown amp Green p 368 Retrieved 5 February 2012 The Edinburgh gazetteer 1827 a b Whitfield Dr Peter 2005 Cities of the world a history in maps University of California Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 520 24725 3 Herefordshire Record Office Reference E60 IV 14 The Old Barracks Harold Street Hereford HR1 2QX The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge Vol IV 1848 London Charles Knight p 19 Halpern Paul G 1995 A naval history of World War I Psychology Press p 349 ISBN 978 1 85728 498 0 a b Perry Matt 2007 Prisoners of want the experience and protest of the unemployed in France 1921 45 Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 146 ISBN 978 0 7546 5607 4 Michelin 2010 Michelin Green Guide France Michelin Apa Publications p 412 ISBN 978 1 906261 78 8 Mitcham Samuel W 2008 The rise of the Wehrmacht the German armed forces and World War II ABC CLIO p 325 ISBN 978 0 275 99659 8 Apple David J 2006 Sir Harold Ridley and his fight for sight he changed the world so that we may better see it SLACK Incorporated p 118 ISBN 978 1 55642 786 2 Rider Nick 2005 Short Breaks Northern France 2nd New Holland Publishers p 32 ISBN 978 1 86011 183 9 Kirsch Scott Flint Colin 2011 Reconstructing Conflict Integrating War and Post War Geographies Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 160 ISBN 978 1 4094 0470 5 Chant Christopher 1986 The encyclopedia of codenames of World War II Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 312 ISBN 978 0 7102 0718 0 Vance Mark A 2011 Flight of the Forgotten Mark Alan Vance p 157 ISBN 978 0 615 47376 5 Hundreds of migrants now target Eurotunnel every night BBC News 25 July 2015 Francesca Ansaloni Deterritorialising the Jungle Understanding the Calais camp through its orderings in Environment and Planning C Politics and Space 25 02 20 doi org 10 1177 2399654420908597 Cameron expects migrant crisis to last all summer RTE News 31 July 2015 Angelique Chrisafis 29 July 2015 The Calais migrant problem a continual drip of poison in Anglo French relations The Guardian Josh Halliday 31 July 2015 Cameron chairs Cobra meeting after overnight standoff in Calais The Guardian French Authorities Confirm the Jungle Refugee Camp Is Empty uk news yahoo com Marta Welander and Fee Mira Gerlach 2020 Refugees and displaced people in norther France a brief timeline of the human rights situation in the Calais area PDF Report Refugee Rights Europe Archived PDF from the original on 16 April 2020 Retrieved 16 April 2020 a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Malfatto Emilienne 14 December 2020 Four years after it became a symbol of Europe s failures migrants are still stranded in Calais Washington Post Retrieved 31 January 2021 Marta Welander Fee Mira Gerlach and Camille Boittiaux 2020 A brief timeline of the human rights situation in Northern France PDF Report Refugee Rights Europe Archived PDF from the original on 31 January 2021 Retrieved 31 January 2021 a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Google 9 April 2020 Calais Map Google Maps Google Retrieved 9 April 2020 Anderson David 2008 Modern law of the sea selected essays Martinus Nijhoff Publishers p 169 ISBN 978 90 04 15891 7 Distance entre Dunkerque et Calais en voiture frdistance com in French Retrieved 18 December 2018 Distance entre Paris et Calais en voiture frdistance com in French Retrieved 18 December 2018 Le Touquet Paris Plage a l aube de son nouveau siecle editions Flandres Artois Cote d Opale 1982 p 22 Calais Marck 62 PDF Fiche Climatologique Statistiques 1981 2010 et records in French Meteo France Retrieved 14 February 2019 a b Des villages de Cassini aux communes d aujourd hui Commune data sheet Calais EHESS in French a b Population en historique depuis 1968 INSEE Willsher Kim 9 January 2012 SeaFrance ferry firm sunk by legal ruling on French bailout The Guardian London Retrieved 5 February 2012 DFDS Seaways DFDS Seaways Retrieved 16 December 2012 P amp O Ferries P amp O Ferries Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b c d Ruler 2011 p 69 a b c Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Ruler 2011 p 66 Calais L UMP Bouchart met fin a 37 ans de gestion communiste Le Telegramme in French 17 March 2008 Retrieved 18 February 2022 Place d Armes Calais Guide co uk Archived from the original on 13 March 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b Hotel de Ville Calais Guide co uk Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b Demotier Charles 1856 Annales de Calais L auteur p 345 Freret Sophie Baledent Martin 2007 Nord Pas de Calais Picardie MICHELIN p 73 ISBN 978 2 06 712165 2 a b Notre Dame Church Calais ws Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b Notre Dame Church Calais Guide co uk Archived from the original on 5 January 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b c d Calton Robert Bell 1852 Annals and legends of Calais J R Smith p 89 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Michelin MFPM 2010 Nord Pas de Calais Picardie Michelin p 106 ISBN 978 2 06 714775 1 Information quarterly R R Bowker 1916 a b c Le Tour de Guet Calais ws Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b c d Lepage Jean Denis G G 2011 British Fortifications Through the Reign of Richard III An Illustrated History McFarland p 276 ISBN 978 0 7864 5918 6 Lefebvre 1766 Histoire de la ville de Calais et du Calaisis precis de l histoire de Morins Lebure p 606 Rider Nick 2005 Short Breaks Northern France 2nd New Holland Publishers p 29 ISBN 978 1 86011 183 9 Lepage Jean Denis G G 2009 French Fortifications 1715 1815 An Illustrated History McFarland p 185 ISBN 978 0 7864 4477 9 Fort Risban Calais ws Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Lepage Jean Denis G G 2011 British Fortifications Through the Reign of Richard III An Illustrated History McFarland p 275 ISBN 978 0 7864 5918 6 a b Fort Nieulay Calais ws Retrieved 5 February 2012 Lepage Jean Denis 2010 Vauban and the French military under Louis XIV an illustrated history of fortifications and strategies McFarland p 151 ISBN 978 0 7864 4401 4 War Museum Calais Guide co uk Archived from the original on 13 March 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b Calais Theatre Calais ws Retrieved 5 February 2012 Chisholm Hugh 1913 The Britannica year book The Encyclopœdia Britannica Company Ltd Retrieved 5 February 2012 Muirhead Findlay Monmarche Marcel 1930 North eastern France Macmillan amp co ltd pp 16 17 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Monuments historiques Caisse nationale des monuments historiques 1 January 1986 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Richelieu Garden Calais ws Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b c Brayne Martin 2016 Gone to the Continent the British in Calais 1760 1860 Gubler Fritz Glynn Raewyn 2008 Great grand amp famous hotels Great Grand amp Famous Hotels p 47 ISBN 978 0 9804667 0 6 Ruler John 2011 Cross Channel France Nord Pas de Calais The Land Beyond the Ports Bradt Travel Guides p 63 ISBN 978 1 84162 327 6 Casino Le Touquet s Calais Guide co uk Archived from the original on 4 March 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Maps Map Google Maps Centre Scolaire Saint Pierre de Calais saintpierrecalais fr in French Retrieved 9 February 2012 France Trainers of First and Second Division Clubs Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Archived from the original on 18 June 2009 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Liquidation du Calais Racing Union Football Club Clap de Fin Pour Une Etoile Filante di Football Retrieved 26 May 2018 Journal de la marine marchande January 1971 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Dernieres infos Calais Basket Retrieved 5 February 2012 ACCUEIL SAISON COB Calais Archived from the original on 25 January 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 LIS St Pierre Calais Volley Ball Lis Calais Retrieved 4 December 2020 Bienvenue Stella Calais Archived from the original on 31 December 2011 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Bienvenue sur le site web officiel du YACHT CLUB DU CALAISIS Yacht Club de Calais Retrieved 5 February 2012 News Les Seagulls Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b c Calais Nord France Invest Retrieved 10 February 2012 Booker France Ferry 18 November 2019 Ferry to France Statistics Passenger Numbers Calais Ferry Calais Ferry Port Aferry co uk Archived from the original on 25 February 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2011 Decouverte de la Ville calais fr in French Calais Retrieved 12 November 2019 Bibliography Edit This article incorporates public domain text from the 1911 edition of theEncyclopaedia Britannicaand Robert Bell Calton sAnnals and Legends of Calais 1852 BooksCalton Robert Bell 1852 Annals and Legends of Calais J R Smith p 1 Cooksey John 1 September 2000 Calais France Casemate ISBN 978 1 58097 011 2 Grummitt David 2008 The Calais Garrison War and Military Service in England 1436 1558 Boydell amp Brewer Ltd ISBN 978 1 84383 398 7 Guerin de Tencin Claudine Alexandrine 1740 The Siege of Calais Garland Pub ISBN 978 0 8240 1101 7 Calais Handbook for Travellers in France 8th ed London John Murray 1861 OL 24627024M Kenna Michael 31 October 2003 Calais Lace Nazraeli Press ISBN 978 1 59005 050 7 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Calais Northern France 3rd ed Leipsic Karl Baedeker 1899 OCLC 2229516 OL 24872324M Rose Susan 2008 Calais an English town in France 1347 1558 Boydell amp Brewer Ltd ISBN 978 1 84383 401 4 Ruler John 25 January 2011 Cross Channel France Nord Pas de Calais the land beyond the ports Bradt Travel Guides ISBN 978 1 84162 327 6 Sandeman George Amelius Crawshay 20 August 2008 Calais under English Rule BiblioBazaar ISBN 978 0 554 73198 8 Turpyn Richard 1846 The Chronicle of Calais in the reigns of Henry VII and Henry VIII to the year 1540 Printed for the Camden Society by J B Nichols External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Calais Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Calais Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Calais France Official website in French Agglomeration in French Info about the port and city in English Info about the port and city in English Old maps of Calais Historic Cities site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Calais amp oldid 1127759011, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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