fbpx
Wikipedia

Saintes, Charente-Maritime

Saintes (French: [sɛ̃t] ; Poitevin-Saintongeais: Sénte) is a commune and historic town in western France, in the Charente-Maritime department of which it is a sub-prefecture, in Nouvelle-Aquitaine. Saintes is the second-largest city in Charente-Maritime, with 25,518 inhabitants in 2021. The city's immediate surroundings form the second-most populous metropolitan area in the department, with 56,598 inhabitants. While a majority of the surrounding landscape consists of fertile, productive fields, a significant minority of the region remains forested, its natural state.

Saintes
Location of Saintes
Saintes
Saintes
Coordinates: 45°44′47″N 0°38′00″W / 45.7464°N 0.6333°W / 45.7464; -0.6333
CountryFrance
RegionNouvelle-Aquitaine
DepartmentCharente-Maritime
ArrondissementSaintes
CantonSaintes
IntercommunalityCA Saintes
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2026) Bruno Drapron[1]
Area
1
45.55 km2 (17.59 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[2]
25,518
 • Density560/km2 (1,500/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
17415 /17100
Elevation2–81 m (6.6–265.7 ft)
(avg. 47 m or 154 ft)
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

In Roman times, Saintes was known as Mediolanum Santonum. During much of its history, the name of the city was spelled Xaintes or Xainctes.

Primarily built on the left bank of the Charente, Saintes became the first Roman capital of Aquitaine. Later it was designated as the capital of the province of Saintonge under the Ancien Régime. Following the French Revolution, it briefly became the prefecture of the department (then called Charente-Inférieure) during the territorial reorganization of 1790, until La Rochelle was designated and superseded it in 1810.[3] Although it only had the status of a subprefecture,[N 1] Saintes was allowed to remain the judicial center of the department. In the late 19th century, Saintes was chosen as the seat of the VIIIth arrondissement of the Chemins de Fer de l'État, railways, which enabled an era of economic and demographic growth.

Today, Saintes remains the economic heart of the center of the department, and it is an important transportation hub.[4] A few major industrial businesses operate (in electronics, rail repair, construction of hoists). The city's commerce and service sector is large, featuring the headquarters of Coop Atlantique, and administrative functions of state, courts, and legal services; banks, schools, and a hospital. Beyond this, property maintenance, retail, and tourism sectors provide large numbers of jobs.

Because of its noteworthy Gallo-Roman, medieval and classical heritage, Saintes is a tourist destination. It has been a member of the French Towns and Lands of Art and History since 1990.[5] It has several museums, a theater, cinemas, and organizes numerous festivals.[6] A European center of musical research and practice is in its Abbaye aux Dames.[7]

Geography edit

Location edit

 
Arch of Germanicus and the Charente

Saintes is on the banks of the river Charente, in the center-eastern part of the department. The city is based 60 km southeast of La Rochelle,[8] 33 kilometers northeast of Royan,[8] and about 100 km north of Bordeaux[8] (to which it is linked by the A10 autoroute).

Geology edit

A chronostratigraphic stage of sedimentary rock (in stratigraphy) has been named after the former name for inhabitants, the Santones, the Santonian (approximately 84 Ma ago, after the Coniacian Age and before the Campanian Age in the Cretaceous Period). Saintes is built on its eponymous subset of mainly limestone that consists of particular flint nodules of quartz geodes and nodules of iron. Ancient stone quarries in its 'Colline de la Capitole' (Capitol Hill) and Bellevue, partially filled or converted to permit fungiculture, are evidence for Santonian stone's use in the construction of various buildings, where unimproved quite vulnerable to frost.[9]

Nearer to the river, the Cretaceous plateau gives way to more or less recent alluvial grasslands composed of bri, a type of clay.

The uplifting of Alps and Pyrenees began during the Maastrichtian, 65 Ma ago, and continued for a part of the Paleogene.

Districts edit

 
Courthouse, district Saint-Vivien.

The town is divided into 14 administrative areas : Les Boiffiers, Les Tourneurs, L'Ormeau de Pied, Recouvrance, La Fenêtre, Saint-Rémy, Saint-Vivien, Saint-Eutrope, Saint-Pierre, Saint-Pallais, Saint-Sébastien de Bouard, La Récluse, Le Maine-Saint-Sorlin and Bellevue.[10]

Left bank (Rive gauche) edit

 
The Post Office on the left bank.
 
City Hall on the left bank, district Saint-Pierre.

The neighborhood of Saint-Pierre lies between the hill of the Capitole and the river Charente. It possesses a significant number of historic monuments justifying its forming of the core of a conservation area that spans over 65 hectares (0.25 sq mi).[11] Built around the cathedral Saint-Pierre, the place du marché and the place du Synode, it is crossed by pedestrian alleys around which can be found numerous medieval, renaissance and classic buildings.[12]

Almost immediately west lies the neighbourhood of Saint-Eutrope, that has developed over the centuries around a rocky elevation bounded by two small valleys at right angles to the river. Dominated by the Saint-Eutrope basilica, it also contains the remains of a Clunian priory and several hillside houses. Little valleys lead to the vallon des Arènes (meaning arenas vale) below, where a Roman amphiteatre survives, in a park named "Parc des Arènes".[12]

The cours Reverseaux and cours des Apôtres de la liberté separate Saint-Eutrope (and its hill) in the west from the faubourg Berthonnière. These partly separate the hill of the Capitole to the north. Once outside-of-the-walls, the faubourg included some hostelries and inns for pilgrims.[12] The streets of the faubourg converge toward the place Saint-Louis, the place de l'Aubarrée and the place Blair, dominated by a column of Liberty (in France popularised as fictional Marianne at the time) erected during the Revolution.[13] The square Goulebenéze stands between the place Blair and the river.

The neighbourhoods of les Boiffiers and Bellevue are separated from the rest of the city by the avenue de Saintonge; they consist mainly in low-rent housing (HLM) and suburban housing standing on a plateau bounded by the Charente. Bellevue has 1,560 inhabitants and spans 17 hectares (42 acres); it is listed as a zone urbaine sensible (ZUS).[14]

La Recouvrance, in a triangle formed by the cours du maréchal Leclerc, the cours Genet and the rocade ouest (bypass), contains a lycée, the former seminary, the Yvon Chevalier stadium and a shopping mall. The water tower of Recouvrance is decorated with frescoes by contemporary artist Michel Genty.

The north of the urban area, the Saint-Vivien neighborhood has an old faubourg (exurb) inhabited since antiquity where the thermes de Saint-Saloine, ancient Roman baths are found.[12]

Right bank (Rive droite) edit

 
Abbaye aux Dames on the right bank

The neighborhood of Saint-Pallais was probably urbanized in antiquity. Structured around the main access way of the Roman city, it was then linked to the town center by a bridge with a monumental entrance, the Arch of Germanicus. During the Middle Ages, a funeral basilica, dedicated to the bishop Palladius, was established (and later replaced by the église Saint-Pallais, which gives its name to the neighborhood), then a Benedictine abbey of women amongst the largest in the region, the Abbaye aux Dames de Saintes. The presence of this monumental heritage led to the integration of part of the neighborhood in a conservation area. It was during the 19th century that the neighborhood began to develop. The antique bridge was destroyed and replaced in 1879 by the pont Bernard-Palissy, a few meters upstream ; the avenue Gambetta and the place Bassompierre are created ; the train station, the Gare de Saintes, the prison, the Haras national de Saintes, the parc Pierre-Mendès France, the Jardin public Fernand Chapsal and the protected area of the prairie de la Palu[12] were subsequently created.

Adjacent communes edit

 
Saintes and its neighboring communes (in orange : Communauté de communes du Pays santon).

Transportation edit

Roads edit

 
The autoroute A10 leaving Saintes towards Bordeaux

Saintes is a transportation hub of some importance, connected by two motorways and several secondary roads, national and departmental, that converge towards the rocade (partly a 2x2) that bypasses the city on its western and southern sides.

The A10 autoroute (France), operated locally by Autoroutes du Sud de la France, passes through the commune in its western part, in a north–south axis. It can be accessed by the interchange 35. By the A10, Saintes is 125 km (78 mi) from Bordeaux, 140 km (87 mi) from Poitiers, 470 km (290 mi) from Paris.

The A837 autoroute is a spur road of the A10 linking the area to Rochefort, the third city in the department.

 
The Saint-Eutrope basilica from the Avenue de Saintonge

Saintes is on the Route Centre-Europe Atlantique, an expressway that links it to Limoges and Lyon in the east – its dualled western section Saintes-Saujon opened to traffic in 2008 making the two 25 minutes apart by car. An extension towards Royan on the coast completed in the following decade.

The rocade is formed in its western part by the national road 137, that meets two key roads, the departmental road 728 (that links Saintes to the Island of Oleron by Marennes) and the departmental road 150 that intersects near the locality of Diconche. In its southern part, the rocade integrates the national road 141, that runs east towards Cognac, Angoulême and Limoges. The departmental road 150, at the end of the east part, runs towards Niort by Saint-Hilaire-de-Villefranche et Saint-Jean-d'Angély. The town center of Saintes is bypassed by the avenue de Saintonge or departmental road 24, that crosses the Charente with the bridge de Saintonge, opened in 1969.

Train edit

The Gare de Saintes (train station) is at the focal point of five railways that link the agglomeration to Nantes (by La Rochelle), Bordeaux, Angoulême, Niort and Royan ; the trains are mainly part of the regional rail network TER Nouvelle-Aquitaine and the network Intercités.

In 1894, the station was the starting point of a 3 km (1.9 mi) long network of tramways that was stopped in 1934. A secondary railway was built, also in 1894, 42 km (26 mi) long linking Saintes to Mortagne-sur-Gironde, by Gémozac, then a somewhat important economic center ; however, this railway was dismantled in 1947.[15]

The importance of this railway network is explained by the designation of Saintes as the seat of the Compagnie des chemins de fer des Charentes in 1867, then as the regional seat of the VIIIth arrondissement of the Chemins de fer de l'État from 1911 to 1971. The SNCF is still a major employer in the city, and new depots and workshops have been opened in 2009 and 2010.

Population edit

Its inhabitants are called Saintaises and Saintais in French.[16]

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1793 8,388—    
1800 10,050+2.62%
1806 10,300+0.41%
182110,274−0.02%
183110,437+0.16%
18369,559−1.74%
18419,994+0.89%
184611,363+2.60%
185111,569+0.36%
185611,927+0.61%
186110,962−1.67%
186611,570+1.09%
187212,437+1.21%
187613,725+2.49%
188115,763+2.81%
188617,327+1.91%
189118,461+1.28%
189620,285+1.90%
YearPop.±% p.a.
190118,219−2.13%
190619,025+0.87%
191120,802+1.80%
192119,152−0.82%
192620,469+1.34%
193120,592+0.12%
193621,160+0.55%
194523,441+1.14%
195423,768+0.15%
196225,717+0.99%
196826,507+0.51%
197526,891+0.21%
198225,471−0.77%
199025,874+0.20%
199925,595−0.12%
2007 26,401+0.39%
2012 25,645−0.58%
2017 25,470−0.14%
Source: EHESS[17] and INSEE[18]

Landmarks edit

 
Cathédrale Saint Pierre
 
The Roman amphitheater
 
Museum
  • The Arch of Germanicus, a triumphal arch, was built at the entrance to a bridge, where the main Roman road crossed the Charente. The bridge was demolished in 1843 but the Arch was saved by Prosper Mérimée and rebuilt at its present location on the bank of the river.
  • Ruins of the Roman amphitheatre on the main, left bank of the Charente, near the summit of the hill upon which the town was built. Its notable tiers (cavea) are built against the hill and an embankment.
  • Some remnants of the thermae of Saint-Saloine (1st century) are also visible, in particular an aqueduct.
  • Fragments of the third century rampart (to the city walls) can be seen in the Place des Récollets. It was built with stones taken from the Roman buildings.
  • Ecclesiastical
  • Museums
    • the Musée archéologique, which has a restored Roman cart/wagon of the first century amongst a collection of sculptures and inscriptions.
    • the Musée du Présidial, which has a mannerist architecture and a collection of regional ceramics and paintings of the 15th to 18th century.
  • the Musée de l'Échevinage, which exhibits porcelain of Sèvres and paintings of the 19th and 20th century

Hospital edit

 
Hospital of Saintes

The hospital of Saintes is the most important hospital center of the department of Charente-Maritime

Education edit

 
High School Bernard Palissy

Saintes is in the catchment of and under the auspices of the académie de Poitiers.

List of schools :
Public kindergartens and elementary schools
  • École Le Cormier
  • École Roger Pérat
  • École Saint-Pallais
  • École Saint-Eutrope
  • École Les Jacobins
  • École Saint-Exupéry
  • École Émile Combes
  • École Jean Jaurès
  • École Jules Ferry
  • École Louis Pasteur
  • École Eugène Pelletan
  • École Paul Bert
  • École Nicolas Lemercier
  • École Léo Lagrange
Private elementary schools
  • École Marie-Eustelle
  • École Jeanne d'Arc-Notre-Dame
Public collèges
  • Collège Edgar Quinet
  • Collège Agrippa d'Aubigné
  • Collège René Caillé
Collège privé
  • Collège Jeanne d'Arc-Notre-Dame
Public lycées of general education
  • Lycée Bernard Palissy
  • Lycée polyvalent régional Bellevue
Private lycée of general education
  • Lycée Notre-Dame-de-Recouvrance
Public professional lycées
  • Établissement régional d'enseignement adapté
  • Lycée agricole Georges Desclaude
  • Lycée professionnel horticole Chadignac
Private professional lycée
  • Lycée technique Claire Champagne
Military school
  • École d'enseignement technique de l'armée de l'air (EETAA)
Business School
  • Centre de Formation d'Apprentis en commerce (CFA Chamber of Commerce)
Higher education
  • Institut de formation en soins infirmiers (IFSI)
  • Institut de formation des aides-soignants (IFAS)
  • Centre d'étude d'architecture et d'urbanisme (CEAU)

Local TV channels edit

 
France 3 Nouvelle-Aquitaine

Saintes is served by France 3 Nouvelle-Aquitaine.

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Saintes is twinned with:[19]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The prefecture of Charente-Maritime is La Rochelle and the subprefectures are alphabetically: Jonzac, Rochefort, Saint-Jean-d'Angély and Saintes.

References edit

  1. ^ "Répertoire national des élus: les maires". data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises (in French). 2 December 2020.
  2. ^ "Populations légales 2021". The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. 28 December 2023.
  3. ^ (in French) Charente-Maritime, encyclopédie Bonneton, p. 64
  4. ^ . Ville de Saintes (in French). Archived from the original on 21 August 2010. Retrieved 27 August 2010.
  5. ^ "Le label Ville d'art et d'histoire". L'atelier du patrimoine de Saintonge (in French). Retrieved 9 January 2010.
  6. ^ . Ville de Saintes (in French). Archived from the original on 29 May 2010. Retrieved 27 August 2010.
  7. ^ (in French) Synthèse des travaux de la commission de stratégie, L'abbaye aux Dames, centre européen de recherche et de pratique musicale de Saintes, note de réflexion stratégique, 2003, Read online
  8. ^ a b c "Quelques villes proches de Saintes". villorama (in French). Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  9. ^ Saintes, plus de 2,000 ans d'histoire illustrée, Société d'archéologie et d'histoire de la Charente-Maritime, p.11-14
  10. ^ Contrat urbain de cohésion sociale 2007-2012, 80 pages
  11. ^ "Le secteur sauvegardé". L'atelier du patrimoine de Saintonge (in French). Retrieved 9 January 2010.
  12. ^ a b c d e . Ville de Saintes (in French). Archived from the original on 15 August 2009. Retrieved 9 January 2010.
  13. ^ (in French) Le patrimoine des communes de la Charente-Maritime, éditions Flohic, p. 1023
  14. ^ "ZUS Bellevue". Website of the ministère du travail, des relations sociales .... et de la ville (in French). Retrieved 29 October 2009.
  15. ^ . Fédération des amis des chemins de fer secondaires. Archived from the original on 23 October 2009. Retrieved 9 January 2010.
  16. ^ Le nom des habitants du 17 - Charente-Maritime, habitants.fr
  17. ^ Des villages de Cassini aux communes d'aujourd'hui: Commune data sheet Saintes, EHESS (in French).
  18. ^ Population en historique depuis 1968, INSEE
  19. ^ "Villes jumelles". ville-saintes.fr (in French). Saintes. Retrieved 18 November 2019.

Bibliography edit

  • (in French) André Baudrit, Saintes au XVIth siècle, (Thèse de Doctorat, Bordeaux 1957), 745 pages.
  • (in French) Jean Combes, Gilles Bernard, Histoire du Poitou et des Pays Charentais, Éditions de Borée, 2001 ISBN 978-2-84494-084-1
  • (in French) Robert Favreau, Régis Rech et Yves-Jean Riou (directeurs) Bonnes villes du Poitou et des Pays Charentais (XIIth–XVIIIth siècles), Actes du colloque tenu à Saint-Jean-d’Angély les 24-25 septembre 1999, Société des antiquaires de l'Ouest in Mémoires de la Société des antiquaires de l'Ouest et des Musées de Poitiers, fifth série, tome VIII (2002), à Poitiers. ISBN 2-9519441-0-1
  • (in French) Michel Garnier, Christian Gensbeit, À la découverte de Saintes, Patrimoines Médias, 2000, ISBN 2-910137-50-3
  • (in French) Daniel Massiou, Histoire politique, civile et religieuse de la Saintonge et de l'Aunis, A.Charrier, libraire-éditeur, Saintes, 1846.
  • (in French) Alain Michaud (sous la direction de), Histoire de Saintes, Privat, 1989, ISBN 2-7089-8252-4
  • (in French) Pierre Rayssiguier (ouvrage collectif sous la direction de), Saintes, plus de 2,000 ans d'histoire illustrée, Société d'archéologie et d'histoire de la Charente-Maritime, Saintes, 2001
  • (in French) Henri Texier, Petite histoire de Saintes, Geste édition, 2003 ISBN 2-84561-092-0
  • (in French) Le patrimoine des communes de la Charente-Maritime, éditions Flohic, collection Le patrimoine des communes de France, 2002.

External links edit

  • (in French) Town council site
  • (in French)
  • (in French) Pictures of the Abbaye aux Dames
  • (in French) Pictures of Saint-Eutrope church: [4] and [5]

saintes, charente, maritime, saintes, french, poitevin, saintongeais, sénte, commune, historic, town, western, france, charente, maritime, department, which, prefecture, nouvelle, aquitaine, saintes, second, largest, city, charente, maritime, with, inhabitants. Saintes French sɛ t Poitevin Saintongeais Sente is a commune and historic town in western France in the Charente Maritime department of which it is a sub prefecture in Nouvelle Aquitaine Saintes is the second largest city in Charente Maritime with 25 518 inhabitants in 2021 The city s immediate surroundings form the second most populous metropolitan area in the department with 56 598 inhabitants While a majority of the surrounding landscape consists of fertile productive fields a significant minority of the region remains forested its natural state SaintesSubprefecture and communeCoat of armsLocation of SaintesSaintesShow map of FranceSaintesShow map of Nouvelle AquitaineCoordinates 45 44 47 N 0 38 00 W 45 7464 N 0 6333 W 45 7464 0 6333CountryFranceRegionNouvelle AquitaineDepartmentCharente MaritimeArrondissementSaintesCantonSaintesIntercommunalityCA SaintesGovernment Mayor 2020 2026 Bruno Drapron 1 Area145 55 km2 17 59 sq mi Population 2021 2 25 518 Density560 km2 1 500 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST INSEE Postal code17415 17100Elevation2 81 m 6 6 265 7 ft avg 47 m or 154 ft 1 French Land Register data which excludes lakes ponds glaciers gt 1 km2 0 386 sq mi or 247 acres and river estuaries In Roman times Saintes was known as Mediolanum Santonum During much of its history the name of the city was spelled Xaintes or Xainctes Primarily built on the left bank of the Charente Saintes became the first Roman capital of Aquitaine Later it was designated as the capital of the province of Saintonge under the Ancien Regime Following the French Revolution it briefly became the prefecture of the department then called Charente Inferieure during the territorial reorganization of 1790 until La Rochelle was designated and superseded it in 1810 3 Although it only had the status of a subprefecture N 1 Saintes was allowed to remain the judicial center of the department In the late 19th century Saintes was chosen as the seat of the VIIIth arrondissement of the Chemins de Fer de l Etat railways which enabled an era of economic and demographic growth Today Saintes remains the economic heart of the center of the department and it is an important transportation hub 4 A few major industrial businesses operate in electronics rail repair construction of hoists The city s commerce and service sector is large featuring the headquarters of Coop Atlantique and administrative functions of state courts and legal services banks schools and a hospital Beyond this property maintenance retail and tourism sectors provide large numbers of jobs Because of its noteworthy Gallo Roman medieval and classical heritage Saintes is a tourist destination It has been a member of the French Towns and Lands of Art and History since 1990 5 It has several museums a theater cinemas and organizes numerous festivals 6 A European center of musical research and practice is in its Abbaye aux Dames 7 Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Location 1 2 Geology 1 3 Districts 1 3 1 Left bank Rive gauche 1 3 2 Right bank Rive droite 1 4 Adjacent communes 1 5 Transportation 1 6 Roads 1 7 Train 2 Population 3 Landmarks 4 Hospital 5 Education 6 Local TV channels 7 Twin towns sister cities 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksGeography editLocation edit nbsp Arch of Germanicus and the CharenteSaintes is on the banks of the river Charente in the center eastern part of the department The city is based 60 km southeast of La Rochelle 8 33 kilometers northeast of Royan 8 and about 100 km north of Bordeaux 8 to which it is linked by the A10 autoroute Geology edit A chronostratigraphic stage of sedimentary rock in stratigraphy has been named after the former name for inhabitants the Santones the Santonian approximately 84 Ma ago after the Coniacian Age and before the Campanian Age in the Cretaceous Period Saintes is built on its eponymous subset of mainly limestone that consists of particular flint nodules of quartz geodes and nodules of iron Ancient stone quarries in its Colline de la Capitole Capitol Hill and Bellevue partially filled or converted to permit fungiculture are evidence for Santonian stone s use in the construction of various buildings where unimproved quite vulnerable to frost 9 Nearer to the river the Cretaceous plateau gives way to more or less recent alluvial grasslands composed of bri a type of clay The uplifting of Alps and Pyrenees began during the Maastrichtian 65 Ma ago and continued for a part of the Paleogene Districts edit nbsp Courthouse district Saint Vivien The town is divided into 14 administrative areas Les Boiffiers Les Tourneurs L Ormeau de Pied Recouvrance La Fenetre Saint Remy Saint Vivien Saint Eutrope Saint Pierre Saint Pallais Saint Sebastien de Bouard La Recluse Le Maine Saint Sorlin and Bellevue 10 Left bank Rive gauche edit nbsp The Post Office on the left bank nbsp City Hall on the left bank district Saint Pierre The neighborhood of Saint Pierre lies between the hill of the Capitole and the river Charente It possesses a significant number of historic monuments justifying its forming of the core of a conservation area that spans over 65 hectares 0 25 sq mi 11 Built around the cathedral Saint Pierre the place du marche and the place du Synode it is crossed by pedestrian alleys around which can be found numerous medieval renaissance and classic buildings 12 Almost immediately west lies the neighbourhood of Saint Eutrope that has developed over the centuries around a rocky elevation bounded by two small valleys at right angles to the river Dominated by the Saint Eutrope basilica it also contains the remains of a Clunian priory and several hillside houses Little valleys lead to the vallon des Arenes meaning arenas vale below where a Roman amphiteatre survives in a park named Parc des Arenes 12 The cours Reverseaux and cours des Apotres de la liberte separate Saint Eutrope and its hill in the west from the faubourg Berthonniere These partly separate the hill of the Capitole to the north Once outside of the walls the faubourg included some hostelries and inns for pilgrims 12 The streets of the faubourg converge toward the place Saint Louis the place de l Aubarree and the place Blair dominated by a column of Liberty in France popularised as fictional Marianne at the time erected during the Revolution 13 The square Goulebeneze stands between the place Blair and the river The neighbourhoods of les Boiffiers and Bellevue are separated from the rest of the city by the avenue de Saintonge they consist mainly in low rent housing HLM and suburban housing standing on a plateau bounded by the Charente Bellevue has 1 560 inhabitants and spans 17 hectares 42 acres it is listed as a zone urbaine sensible ZUS 14 La Recouvrance in a triangle formed by the cours du marechal Leclerc the cours Genet and the rocade ouest bypass contains a lycee the former seminary the Yvon Chevalier stadium and a shopping mall The water tower of Recouvrance is decorated with frescoes by contemporary artist Michel Genty The north of the urban area the Saint Vivien neighborhood has an old faubourg exurb inhabited since antiquity where the thermes de Saint Saloine ancient Roman baths are found 12 Right bank Rive droite edit nbsp Abbaye aux Dames on the right bankThe neighborhood of Saint Pallais was probably urbanized in antiquity Structured around the main access way of the Roman city it was then linked to the town center by a bridge with a monumental entrance the Arch of Germanicus During the Middle Ages a funeral basilica dedicated to the bishop Palladius was established and later replaced by the eglise Saint Pallais which gives its name to the neighborhood then a Benedictine abbey of women amongst the largest in the region the Abbaye aux Dames de Saintes The presence of this monumental heritage led to the integration of part of the neighborhood in a conservation area It was during the 19th century that the neighborhood began to develop The antique bridge was destroyed and replaced in 1879 by the pont Bernard Palissy a few meters upstream the avenue Gambetta and the place Bassompierre are created the train station the Gare de Saintes the prison the Haras national de Saintes the parc Pierre Mendes France the Jardin public Fernand Chapsal and the protected area of the prairie de la Palu 12 were subsequently created Adjacent communes edit nbsp Saintes and its neighboring communes in orange Communaute de communes du Pays santon Transportation edit Roads edit nbsp The autoroute A10 leaving Saintes towards BordeauxSaintes is a transportation hub of some importance connected by two motorways and several secondary roads national and departmental that converge towards the rocade partly a 2x2 that bypasses the city on its western and southern sides The A10 autoroute France operated locally by Autoroutes du Sud de la France passes through the commune in its western part in a north south axis It can be accessed by the interchange 35 By the A10 Saintes is 125 km 78 mi from Bordeaux 140 km 87 mi from Poitiers 470 km 290 mi from Paris The A837 autoroute is a spur road of the A10 linking the area to Rochefort the third city in the department nbsp The Saint Eutrope basilica from the Avenue de SaintongeSaintes is on the Route Centre Europe Atlantique an expressway that links it to Limoges and Lyon in the east its dualled western section Saintes Saujon opened to traffic in 2008 making the two 25 minutes apart by car An extension towards Royan on the coast completed in the following decade The rocade is formed in its western part by the national road 137 that meets two key roads the departmental road 728 that links Saintes to the Island of Oleron by Marennes and the departmental road 150 that intersects near the locality of Diconche In its southern part the rocade integrates the national road 141 that runs east towards Cognac Angouleme and Limoges The departmental road 150 at the end of the east part runs towards Niort by Saint Hilaire de Villefranche et Saint Jean d Angely The town center of Saintes is bypassed by the avenue de Saintonge or departmental road 24 that crosses the Charente with the bridge de Saintonge opened in 1969 Train edit The Gare de Saintes train station is at the focal point of five railways that link the agglomeration to Nantes by La Rochelle Bordeaux Angouleme Niort and Royan the trains are mainly part of the regional rail network TER Nouvelle Aquitaine and the network Intercites In 1894 the station was the starting point of a 3 km 1 9 mi long network of tramways that was stopped in 1934 A secondary railway was built also in 1894 42 km 26 mi long linking Saintes to Mortagne sur Gironde by Gemozac then a somewhat important economic center however this railway was dismantled in 1947 15 The importance of this railway network is explained by the designation of Saintes as the seat of the Compagnie des chemins de fer des Charentes in 1867 then as the regional seat of the VIIIth arrondissement of the Chemins de fer de l Etat from 1911 to 1971 The SNCF is still a major employer in the city and new depots and workshops have been opened in 2009 and 2010 Population editIts inhabitants are called Saintaises and Saintais in French 16 Historical populationYearPop p a 17938 388 180010 050 2 62 180610 300 0 41 182110 274 0 02 183110 437 0 16 18369 559 1 74 18419 994 0 89 184611 363 2 60 185111 569 0 36 185611 927 0 61 186110 962 1 67 186611 570 1 09 187212 437 1 21 187613 725 2 49 188115 763 2 81 188617 327 1 91 189118 461 1 28 189620 285 1 90 YearPop p a 190118 219 2 13 190619 025 0 87 191120 802 1 80 192119 152 0 82 192620 469 1 34 193120 592 0 12 193621 160 0 55 194523 441 1 14 195423 768 0 15 196225 717 0 99 196826 507 0 51 197526 891 0 21 198225 471 0 77 199025 874 0 20 199925 595 0 12 200726 401 0 39 201225 645 0 58 201725 470 0 14 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Source EHESS 17 and INSEE 18 Landmarks edit nbsp Cathedrale Saint Pierre nbsp The Roman amphitheater nbsp MuseumThe Arch of Germanicus a triumphal arch was built at the entrance to a bridge where the main Roman road crossed the Charente The bridge was demolished in 1843 but the Arch was saved by Prosper Merimee and rebuilt at its present location on the bank of the river Ruins of the Roman amphitheatre on the main left bank of the Charente near the summit of the hill upon which the town was built Its notable tiers cavea are built against the hill and an embankment Some remnants of the thermae of Saint Saloine 1st century are also visible in particular an aqueduct Fragments of the third century rampart to the city walls can be seen in the Place des Recollets It was built with stones taken from the Roman buildings Ecclesiastical The Abbaye aux Dames Madame de Montespan was educated here Other churches the Basilique Saint Eutrope Basilica of Saint Eutropius and the Cathedrale Saint Pierre Saintes Cathedral 1 Basilique Saint Eutrope 2 3 Museums the Musee archeologique which has a restored Roman cart wagon of the first century amongst a collection of sculptures and inscriptions the Musee du Presidial which has a mannerist architecture and a collection of regional ceramics and paintings of the 15th to 18th century the Musee de l Echevinage which exhibits porcelain of Sevres and paintings of the 19th and 20th centuryHospital edit nbsp Hospital of SaintesThe hospital of Saintes is the most important hospital center of the department of Charente MaritimeEducation edit nbsp High School Bernard PalissySaintes is in the catchment of and under the auspices of the academie de Poitiers List of schools Public kindergartens and elementary schoolsEcole Le Cormier Ecole Roger Perat Ecole Saint Pallais Ecole Saint Eutrope Ecole Les Jacobins Ecole Saint Exupery Ecole Emile Combes Ecole Jean Jaures Ecole Jules Ferry Ecole Louis Pasteur Ecole Eugene Pelletan Ecole Paul Bert Ecole Nicolas Lemercier Ecole Leo LagrangePrivate elementary schoolsEcole Marie Eustelle Ecole Jeanne d Arc Notre Dame Public collegesCollege Edgar Quinet College Agrippa d Aubigne College Rene CailleCollege priveCollege Jeanne d Arc Notre DamePublic lycees of general educationLycee Bernard Palissy Lycee polyvalent regional BellevuePrivate lycee of general education Lycee Notre Dame de Recouvrance Public professional lycees Etablissement regional d enseignement adapte Lycee agricole Georges Desclaude Lycee professionnel horticole ChadignacPrivate professional lycee Lycee technique Claire ChampagneMilitary school Ecole d enseignement technique de l armee de l air EETAA Business School Centre de Formation d Apprentis en commerce CFA Chamber of Commerce Higher education Institut de formation en soins infirmiers IFSI Institut de formation des aides soignants IFAS Centre d etude d architecture et d urbanisme CEAU Two U S universities conduct year round study abroad programs at the C E A U the University of Houston s Gerald D Hines College of Architecture and the University of Southern California Local TV channels edit nbsp France 3 Nouvelle AquitaineSaintes is served by France 3 Nouvelle Aquitaine Twin towns sister cities editSaintes is twinned with 19 nbsp Nivelles Belgium nbsp Xanten Germany nbsp Timbuktu Mali nbsp Vladimir Russia nbsp Salisbury England United Kingdom nbsp Cuevas del Almanzora SpainSee also editSaintongeais language Communes of the Charente Maritime departmentNotes edit The prefecture of Charente Maritime is La Rochelle and the subprefectures are alphabetically Jonzac Rochefort Saint Jean d Angely and Saintes References edit Repertoire national des elus les maires data gouv fr Plateforme ouverte des donnees publiques francaises in French 2 December 2020 Populations legales 2021 The National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies 28 December 2023 in French Charente Maritime encyclopedie Bonneton p 64 Saintes Pole economique Ville de Saintes in French Archived from the original on 21 August 2010 Retrieved 27 August 2010 Le label Ville d art et d histoire L atelier du patrimoine de Saintonge in French Retrieved 9 January 2010 Saintes Culture et Patrimoine Ville de Saintes in French Archived from the original on 29 May 2010 Retrieved 27 August 2010 in French Synthese des travaux de la commission de strategie L abbaye aux Dames centre europeen de recherche et de pratique musicale de Saintes note de reflexion strategique 2003 Read online a b c Quelques villes proches de Saintes villorama in French Retrieved 21 March 2022 Saintes plus de 2 000 ans d histoire illustree Societe d archeologie et d histoire de la Charente Maritime p 11 14 Contrat urbain de cohesion sociale 2007 2012 80 pages Le secteur sauvegarde L atelier du patrimoine de Saintonge in French Retrieved 9 January 2010 a b c d e Historique des quartiers Ville de Saintes in French Archived from the original on 15 August 2009 Retrieved 9 January 2010 in French Le patrimoine des communes de la Charente Maritime editions Flohic p 1023 ZUS Bellevue Website of the ministere du travail des relations sociales et de la ville in French Retrieved 29 October 2009 Les chemins de fer secondaires en France Federation des amis des chemins de fer secondaires Archived from the original on 23 October 2009 Retrieved 9 January 2010 Le nom des habitants du 17 Charente Maritime habitants fr Des villages de Cassini aux communes d aujourd hui Commune data sheet Saintes EHESS in French Population en historique depuis 1968 INSEE Villes jumelles ville saintes fr in French Saintes Retrieved 18 November 2019 Bibliography edit in French Andre Baudrit Saintes au XVIth siecle These de Doctorat Bordeaux 1957 745 pages in French Jean Combes Gilles Bernard Histoire du Poitou et des Pays Charentais Editions de Boree 2001 ISBN 978 2 84494 084 1 in French Robert Favreau Regis Rech et Yves Jean Riou directeurs Bonnes villes du Poitou et des Pays Charentais XIIth XVIIIth siecles Actes du colloque tenu a Saint Jean d Angely les 24 25 septembre 1999 Societe des antiquaires de l Ouest in Memoires de la Societe des antiquaires de l Ouest et des Musees de Poitiers fifth serie tome VIII 2002 a Poitiers ISBN 2 9519441 0 1 in French Michel Garnier Christian Gensbeit A la decouverte de Saintes Patrimoines Medias 2000 ISBN 2 910137 50 3 in French Daniel Massiou Histoire politique civile et religieuse de la Saintonge et de l Aunis A Charrier libraire editeur Saintes 1846 in French Alain Michaud sous la direction de Histoire de Saintes Privat 1989 ISBN 2 7089 8252 4 in French Pierre Rayssiguier ouvrage collectif sous la direction de Saintes plus de 2 000 ans d histoire illustree Societe d archeologie et d histoire de la Charente Maritime Saintes 2001 in French Henri Texier Petite histoire de Saintes Geste edition 2003 ISBN 2 84561 092 0 in French Le patrimoine des communes de la Charente Maritime editions Flohic collection Le patrimoine des communes de France 2002 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saintes Saintes History Urban Development in French Town council site in French Tourism office site in French Pictures of the Abbaye aux Dames in French Pictures of Saint Eutrope church 4 and 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saintes Charente Maritime amp oldid 1194715328, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.